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samedi 16 mai 2015

Which Features from Android Wear Do You Think the Apple Watch Will Copy?

New Apple Watch is seen during an Apple event at the Flint Center in Cupertino

The battle of the smartphone platforms has made its way to the smartwatch arena, as both Apple and Google fight to make their offerings the most appealing. While their has already been a wide variety of Android Wear smartwatches for quite some time now, the unveiling of the highly anticipated Apple Watch now heightens the competition. The Apple Watch, however, is still brand new to the game and will likely take a few notes from its rivals. Which features do you think the Apple Watch will copy from Android Wear?

The post Which Features from Android Wear Do You Think the Apple Watch Will Copy? appeared first on xda-developers.



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vendredi 15 mai 2015

OnePlus One Touchscreen Issues Fixed

oneplus-one-kym-3

OnePlus One users have had a big headache because of the many touchscreen issues that plagued the device. The issue has been addressed by CyanogenMod founder Steve Kondik who merged the update into the CM12.1 nightly branch. According to users all issues are gone, so grab the latest nightly and verify yourself.

The post OnePlus One Touchscreen Issues Fixed appeared first on xda-developers.



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MediaTek Reportedly to Replace Qualcomm in Flagships

2_r

Mediatek continues to strengthen its position in the mobile world. According to reports, OEMs like Sony, Meizu, LG Electronics, HTC, ZTE and Lenovo are planning to use the 10-core Helio X20 SoCs in their premium devices. It’s a big change, considering the fact that Qualcomm was a leader in that department for years.

The post MediaTek Reportedly to Replace Qualcomm in Flagships appeared first on xda-developers.



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End of Denial: Yet Another SD810 Phone with Issues?

20150515204731489

From very early on, Android fans were concerned about the Qualcomm Snapdragon 810. Early rumors didn’t favor the chipset, but then they were just that – rumors. Then the G Flex 2 came out, and surprise-surprise: performance was sub-par. LG was quick to dismiss this as a software issue. The M9 rekindled the doubts when it was shown to overheat during intense benchmarking.

 

This, too, was dismissed as a software issue, and a firmware revision “fixed” the problem by putting a severe cap on CPU frequencies which directly affected real-world performance.  But the story does not stop there…

 

Other developers were locked into the Snapdragon 810, presumably due to development times. The Xperia Z4 and Xiaomi Mi Note Pro are flagships with the same fiery dragon heart, and both of the companies behind these were reported to be fixing it. Sony was allegedly battling the Snapdragon 810’s heat, as was Xiaomi which recently disclosed that they had applied 5 different patents to try and tame the dragon. Xiaomi claimed that they did indeed succeed, and that they not only managed to keep the heat down, but also (and consequently) significantly improve performance.

 

The main issue we see at XDA is not the Snapdragon 810 itself, but the amount of misinformation surrounding this particular chipset. Another worrisome aspect is the fact that many websites – from Android blogs to business sites – try their best to mitigate these issues, hide them or dismiss them. The biggest problem comes when said sites take comments at face-value, like those of VP of Marketing Tim McDonough who adamantly defended the chip from criticism. As a marketer, that is his job. Our job at the XDA Portal is putting things into context to inform our users, and find the real truth in the process every now and then. We dismantled McDonough’s arguments and refuted them, but sadly the blogosphere at large didn’t do the same.

 

Now, the Snapdragon 810 publicly appeared again, this time in the allegedly “fixed” Mi Note Pro. Was the dragon really tamed? One would think it is too early to say (and it certainly is to conclude), but early reports paint a rather grim picture of the situation. Users in social media and the Xiaomi forums are claiming all sorts of incidents related to heat: high temperatures while charging and gaming, faulty displays and there are even mentions of components that simply stop functioning for good. Xiaomi investigated some of these issues and even replaced a particularly controversial unit. They contacted Gizmochina and said the following:

 

1. On May 13, we’ve given the user a new Mi Note Pro and he has expressed satisfaction with the replacement.

2. The technicians that first encountered the faulty unit have verified that the mainboard was NOT burnt.

3. The unit is currently in transit to Xiaomi’s Beijing office where our engineers will investigate why it cannot be turned on.

Xiaomi is very dedicated to their fanbase, and it is hard for us to believe that they would release a phone with these kind of issues – particularly the Pro version of a flagship. We do not know just how limited the scope of these incidents are, but to see such an awaited flagship be met with such controversy over what we can reasonably infer is the Snapdragon 810 is rather heatbreaking. But the most heartbreaking part about this is that many journalists are still afraid of pointing fingers at OEMs and Qualcomm. And while commercial devices do not show overheating per se, they suffer the constraints needed to reduce or eliminate it. There were overheating issues with the chipset, and there are still. The chinese giant itself had an administrator recognise these SD810 issues in a statement:

 

How do we work on the heating system of Mi Note pro, with a super slim body of 6.95 mm? To solve the heating issue of Snapdragon 810. Our engineers optimized the phone structure to dissipate the heat more evenly. Heat conductivity of CPU has been lifted and 4 graphite cooling fins are inserted inside, one of them being double-layered. Playing games for 20 minutes? The temperature on the back is 36.3℃, lower than that of human body. Xiaomi has applied for 5 heat conductivity patents.

So why are some sites like still referencing McDonough’s comments, and claiming that it might not be the actual Snapdragon 810’s physical construction that causes issues in both pre-release and commercial devices? They keep hinting that a software update will save the phone as seen in the M9 and G Flex 2, which made plenty of users feel like these two were unfinished phones. The fact that we are still talking about this problem 5 months and a half into 2015 and that the same problems still show up over and over while apologists deny it with arguments that can’t hold under scrutiny is rather embarrassing.

 

Even early reviews show that the Mi Note Pro (or at the very least certain units) gets hot (46°C after less than 15 minutes of gameplay) and throttles itself. A software update might fix these issues, and they might not even be as widespread or significant as before (time will tell), but it is about time the blogosphere as a whole starts, at the very least, looking at this situation a little more critically. I would wager that many journalists do not believe what they are writing when they defend the chip, because at this point it is rather nonsensical to buy into Qualcomm’s marketing fairytale without a significantly compelling explanation, which we still don’t have.
The Snapdragon 810 might have condemned an entire cycle of phones. HTC’s sales plummeted last month and analysts were quick to mention the Snapdragon 810 as a possible cause. It’s time to end unreasonable denial and apologia in the blogosphere, because it directly affects trusting consumers. Journalism must be skeptic, critical, and above all fair to everyone – especially the receivers. There is only one final thing to say here which I think summarizes some of the issues we see in this industry, and it does not come from any of us at XDA but from the acclaimed critical novelist and journalist George Orwell:

 

The post End of Denial: Yet Another SD810 Phone with Issues? appeared first on xda-developers.



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Chrome For Android AMA Summary

Chrome android AMA

Five members of Google’s Android For Chrome team descended on to Reddit earlier this week for an AMA. 1,208 comments later and the team which consisted of a Software Engineer, a Technical Program Manager, an Interaction Designer, a Product Support Manager and a Developer Advocate had answered a wide range of questions. Here are but a few of the best.

 

Will Chrome for Android ever support extensions?

“There are no plans to add extensions support on mobile. It is for a combination of reasons. Mobile devices are resource-constrained, and extensions can bog down the browsing experience. We are also concerned about how much abuse we see through extensions. A top user complaint about Chrome on desktop involves unwanted software, injecting ads or changing settings. This is typically accomplished via extensions.”

 

When will we be able to build a fully fledged Chromium (the Open Source counterpart) for Android?

“Soon!” – kerz_chrome Chrome for Android Technical Program Manager

 

For animation, do you recommend CSS or JS?

“It’s a blend. My good friend and colleague wrote up a lot about this on Web Fundamentals and also created a Udacity course for it.” – Kinlan Chrome for Android Developer Advocate

 

These are exciting projects, will they be merged or connected together? What is the relation between these projects?

“I suppose it is my Job as a Developer Advocate to present a consistent story about how all these interplay with each other. Not sure I am doing a great job at the moment.

with regards to polymer there is a lot of cool stuff happening there and I would check out rob dodsons Polycast series.

with regards to offline apps, that is something that I am working on a lot at the moment and there is a lot of interplay between manifest, service worker, push notifications and a bunch of other pieces that make it pretty hard to tell a hooked up story for every developer… Currently I am thinking about doing a smaller set of focused stories for industries so: how do you build the next media app, well you use X, Y , Z in this way.” – Kinlan Chrome for Android Developer Advocate

 

Any new features you are testing lately or thinking of?

“Good question! If you are a web developer, check out our upcoming features list to see what we are working on.
On desktop, things like Bluetooth are coming along well. On mobile, more work around Add to homescreen and web app install banners are getting worked on.” – Kinlan Chrome for Android Developer Advocate

 

Are there any plans to do more aggressive tab syncing between the browser and Android version? I.e the same tab being accessible on multiple devices so you can just pick up where you left on another device?

“On the Recent Tabs page, you can already access your currently open tabs from all your devices. We’re only syncing the URL and title of the tab, so when you reopen it on a new device you do lose state like how far you have scrolled down, any text you’ve entered into forms, etc.

We have looked into expanding this by automatically opening, reordering and closing tabs and windows across devices. However, when we’ve tried this out we weren’t satisfied with the overall experience. We found we didn’t want to use the exact same set of tabs on each of our devices, and that having tabs automatically open was jarring.

We’ve also looked at syncing more of your tab state. This is mostly about the privacy tradeoffs involved into syncing the whole state of a page, as well as technical complexity of saving and recreating the wide variety of web pages (and apps!) that people use every day.”

 

When will scrolling on Chrome for Android be smooth and not jerky?

“We care a lot about scrolling performance and we make small improvements to it almost every Chrome release. Although individually not always noticeable, it’s added up over time and if you were to compare to our first build (Chrome 16) on the same device, you’d see a night-and-day difference. An example of a recent improvement is that we changed the task scheduler (http://ift.tt/1Jc1Suu) that helps smooth out loading and also scrolling when other tasks are exectuting.

That said, there are many causes to scroll jank and we haven’t yet tackled them all. It’s a continuous process of whacking perf problems one by one, and on particular websites we can still be janky. Expect to see more gradual improvements over time. For example, we’re in the midst of rewriting our painting pipeline to make smarter layering decisions, and to utilize the GPU even more than we are today.” – Kinlan Chrome for Android Developer Advocate

 

Why is there no option for tabs in overview for tablets?

“Great question! When Chrome launched the original tablet design, at the time it was believed that tablets would be your desktop replacement. That led to today’s design, where it has tabs and the whole feel of the desktop world. It makes it harder to apply the phone layout here, because the models are different. But as we’ve gone on it’s become clear that you might do way more complex tasks on your phone than on your tablet, which people use mostly for consumption like watching movies. There are a couple questions on this AMA about how to adapt for larger phones sizes, and I’d say our thinking for that would also apply to tablets, now that we have a better idea of how people are using them.” – rrolfe Chrome for Android UX Designer

 

Mobile web is severely crippled by a lack of lower JavaScript API access (e.g. Payments, Share Intents, etc.). Are there plans to bring these APIs to chrome? 

“We are actively working on bridging the gap between web and native and making it easier to get developers building better and more deeply integrated apps and site. Not sure about payments, but we are improving autocomplete and other areas around text entry to make conversions easier. Share is something that I am looking at (given my web intents history :( ), we are working on other API’s such as bluetooth and background sync, we now have push notifications and network management (via Service Worker)” – Kinlan Chrome for Android Developer Advocate

 

Are their any cool new features that you guys are planning to implement? Have you thought about adding something like link bubble?

“We actually have a lot of new content consumption features coming out in the near future too. These come in all sorts of flavors (contextual search to make finding more information on page content easier, new ways to consume web pages that aren’t as readable on mobile, a more mobile-friendly new tab page, etc.). You can check out a lot of these by using Chrome Dev. Just go to chrome://flags and you can find some interesting stuff to turn on :).” – aurimas_chromium Chrome for Android Software Engineer

 

The newly added Push and Notification APIs are great! However, the Push API in Google Chrome currently relies on Google Cloud Messaging’s gcm_sender_id which requires an API key from Google. Is there a timeline for supporting the Web Push Protocol so that the Push API can be used without gcm_sender_id?

“Good question and there is a lot to it :) – we shipped the W3C Push API with Google Cloud Messaging (GCM) as a (proprietary) server-side protocol in order to allow mobile web developers to use this API as soon as possible, but we are working closely with Mozilla etc on putting together the IETF web push protocol as a standardized replacement for the server-side protocol, and it’s shaping up nicely.

We’re going to spend a while experimenting and optimizing a GCM-based implementation of the web push protocol, and we’ll share more once we have something you can play with.” – Kinlan Android Chrome Developer Advocate

 

What do you think of moving the address bar to the bottom? With most of the current phones being 5″ and above, I think it makes a lot of sense in terms of usability.

“Totally makes sense! We’re always thinking about how to adjust the layout for the variety of devices out there. There’s some interesting considerations for the transition between phone to tablet to desktop and how we optimize both for screen size and the reach of your thumb. Definitely lots to explore there.” – rrolfe Chrome for Android UX Designer

 

Would you guys explain how you’re dealing with the slowness of Chrome and its memory hogging?

“We are profiling Chrome to improve our startup speed and proactively fighting memory bloat and memory leaks. For example, this year the first gesture latency and mean input latency has decreased steadily” – aurimas_chromium Chrome for Android Software Engineer

 

What’s the update cycle for the 5.0 Chrome Webview? Seems a little random at the moment.

“We’re planning to mirror the Chrome release cycle over time, as we get up to speed.” – kerz_ chrome Chrome for Android Technical Program Manager


These were just a few of the questions and hopefully they have answered some of your own. If you were unable to attend the AMA or have questions that were left unanswered we have an interview with a Google Developer Advocate coming soon.

Leave your questions below!

The post Chrome For Android AMA Summary appeared first on xda-developers.



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LG G4 Quick Charge! YU Yuphoria Launched – XDA TV

Jordan

Android Lollipop-based Color OS is coming for the Oppo Find 7. That and much more news is covered by Jordan when he reviews all the important stories from this week. Included in this week’s news is the announcement of the YU Yuphoria and be sure to check out the article talking about the LG G4 supporting quick charge. That’s not all that’s covered in today’s video!

Jordan talks about the other videos released this week on XDA TV. XDA TV Producer TK released an Xposed Tuesday video covering the Xposed Framework Alpha for Android Lollipop 5.1. Then Jordan reviewed the YU Yureka. Also, TK showed you how to tweak your kernel. Finally, Jordan announced the winner of the Vinsic 20,000mAh Ultra Slim Power Bank Giveaway. Pull up a chair and check out this video.


Be sure to check out other great XDA TV Videos

Check out Jordan’s YouTube Channel and Jordan’s Gaming YouTube Channel

Vinsic 20,000mAh Ultra Slim Power Bank Giveaway

The post LG G4 Quick Charge! YU Yuphoria Launched – XDA TV appeared first on xda-developers.



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Snake Rewind

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Original Nokia “Snake” creator, Taneli Armanto, is back with his Android iteration of the popular classic, in collaboration with Finnish studio Rumilus. Snake Rewind is a free to play with IAP’s, featuring minimalistic controls, achievements and the ability to have us reminisce about the good ‘ole days.

The post Snake Rewind appeared first on xda-developers.



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