Mozilla previews new, cleaner Firefox for Android UI on Nightly build

DNP Firefox Nightly UI change

Before you know it, you’ll be enjoying a cleaner, shinier Firefox UI on Android — but not before Mozilla gets the more adventurous to test it out. The brand-spanking new interface merges the Start Page and the Awesomescreen, which is what you see after tapping on the URL bar. Thus, it will house your history, bookmarks, reading list and most visited websites in one place. While Mozilla UI engineer Lucas Rocha calls it the “biggest UI change in Firefox for Android” since the app was released, the update isn’t quite yet ready. If you’re unafraid of testing unstable releases, however, you can take the new UI for a spin via Firefox Nightly — Mozilla’s launchpad for new features. Everyone else, feel free to head past the break for a comparison image of the current and future interfaces.

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Via: Android Police

Source: Lucas Rocha, Firefox Nightly

Xbox One dashboard: what to expect

Xbox One user interface what to expect

So, you want an Xbox One? Do you really want one though… like, really? How do you know? Maybe the interface is terrible. That’s something you’ll just have to ponder until you play one. Well, that’s only partly true, we sat down with Microsoft today at Gamescom for a bit of a tour. The bad news? Microsoft wasn’t quite confident enough to let us show you the interface with photos or video, due to its pre-release nature. The good news? We’re going to paint you a word picture instead! The results await after the break.

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Tweetdeck Just Got a Little Bit Prettier

Tweetdeck Just Got a Little Bit Prettier

Tweetdeck’s got a gift for you today. No, unfortunately it’s not fixed notifications, but it’s still a step in the right direction. Meet the new, prettier tweet panel. It makes firing off 140-char screeds a little more pleasant.

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Android’s Tips for Beautiful Icon Design Are the Opposite of Google’s

Android's Tips for Beautiful Icon Design Are the Opposite of Google's

Today, Android published a helpful blog post offering up a list of design tips for developers slaving away over new app icons, encouraging them to use shadows, textures, and micro detail. We’re watching Android grow up into its own distinct visual identity—independent even from Google mothership.

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Designers, Shadows Are Totally Fine in a Flat UI

Designers, Shadows Are Totally Fine in a Flat UI

This time, just a year ago, very few people knew the terms “skeuomorphism” and “flat design." We complained about the kind of leathery design of some apps on iOS and OS X, but in general, the UI of Apple’s mobile operating system was just fine. Then, in just a few weeks, everything changed—and suddenly flat design was the new style everybody was talking about.

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PS4 video reveals UI for sharing gameplay videos, multitasking, making friends

PS4 video shows off UI for sharing gameplay videos, multitasking, making friends

By now, most people ought to have dismissed the old stereotype that the male is the calm, rational opposite of the hysterical female. If anything, it’s the other way round, which is why the short promo video shown right at the end of Sony’s E3 press conference was kind of refreshing. It was also pretty useful, because even if the software it shows isn’t final, it reveals how the PS4 user interface is likely to handle things like chat, gameplay video sharing and multitasking. Read on for a cut-down version of the fast-paced clip and our probing evaluation of what it says about PS4 gaming and human behavior.

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Source: Official Sony YouTube video

Gmail 4.5 for Android rolling out today with multiple tabs, slide-out navigation

Gmail for Android 45 rolling out today with slideout navigation

Gmail’s desktop inbox just went through some pretty significant UI changes, and we’ve just been waiting for Google to update its mobile apps with many of the same elements. The Android app, which Android Police reports is beginning its rollout today, reflects the new multiple-tabbed interface we’ve had the opportunity to play with for the last week — it offers the same five tabs that are found on the desktop version, in addition to a new slide-out navigation interface. We’re still waiting to get official word from Google about the update, but we’ll let you know as soon as we have it. In the meantime, if you feel daring enough to try the new APK, head below to the source link to find a selection of available mirrors.

Update: it looks like the update is starting to appear in the Play Store. Head here to see if it’s available for your device. We’ve had the chance to download it, and can confirm that it offers swipe to refresh in addition to the features mentioned earlier.

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Source: AndroidPolice

Pebble firmware update 1.11 arrives with UI improvements, Simplicity watchface

EDIT Pebble version 1110

Pebble’s smartwatch might have launched with limited capabilities, but the list of things it can do keeps growing. Now that the company has released firmware version 1.11, you can add a few more features to that list. The update brings notification and set time UI changes, multiple notification viewing, the wearer’s current speed measured by RunKeeper, swaps the music app’s next and previous buttons and squashes a few bugs. It also installs the Simplicity watchface on the device that’s sure to make minimalists happy. Sadly, there’s nary a hint of a new game in sight so you’ll have to make do with Tetris and Snake whenever the mood for smartwatch gaming strikes. To get version 1.11, launch your Pebble smartphone app and tap “check for FW update.”

David Fishman contributed to this report.

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Source: Pebble

Samsung thinks the strangers who take pictures of you could do a better job

Samsung thinks the strangers who take pictures of you could do a better job

Everyone’s found themselves in this situation at one time or another: you’re in a picture-perfect setting, but a selfie at arm’s length won’t cut it. You want to be in the picture, so you wait for a friendly looking passerby and ask them to take it. But, now it’s out of your control, and chances are the resulting snap won’t turn out exactly as you’d imagined. Samsung knows you’re too polite to hold the stranger up while you convey your vision, so it has come up with a camera feature that does the explaining for you. It’s described in a recent patent filing, and the gist is that you select the backdrop and take an initial snap that acts as a guide for the next, similar to how some panorama modes work. With a silhouette of the desired scene now showing atop the live view, the designated stranger just needs to let you get in the shot, line the overlay up with the live scene, and hit the shutter release.

The patent application also talks of editing the overlay, such as adding a circle to show the photographer where you’d like your face to be in relation to the backdrop. If you want the passerby to know how well they’re doing, the claims explain an on-screen “composition score” that would rate their lining-up skills. And, if you’d rather trust the final decision to the camera, a ball-in-the-hole scenario is described that’ll automatically engage the shutter release when the live view matches your ideal layout. This is just words and a few diagrams at this stage, mind, but if the patent gets granted, we could eventually see such a feature added to Samsung’s smartphones or Galaxy cameras. Until then, you’ll just have to put your trust in strangers and hope they have at least a basic understanding of the rule of thirds.

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Source: USPTO (1), (2) (PDF)

Roku’s second gen players can get their grid menu update now

Second generation Roku players can update to the new grid menus manually

We dug the grid-style menu system that came along with the Roku 3, and now owners of some of the company’s older players can experience it as well. The Roku 2 boxes, Roku LT, newer Roku HD and Streaming Stick are all eligible to download the new update, although it’s not coming to the company’s first generation boxes. It’s been rolling out to limited numbers of users all month for testing, but tonight the company announced anyone can get it by prompting their box to manually update. All it takes is checking the update section under settings, otherwise it will be downloaded automatically at some point in the next few weeks.

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Source: Roku blog