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mardi 13 décembre 2016

Nova Launcher 5.0 rolls out with new Pixel-style search bar and more

Nova Launcher is turning five years old, so it seems appropriate that the popular Android launcher app rolls out a new 5.0 version to users today. This release adds quite a few new features for folks to try out.

See also:

Become a Nova Launcher power user

1 day ago

One of the launcher's developers, Cliff Wade, offered up some quick change notes on his Google+ page. One of the new features is a Pixel-style search bar, and like the Pixel Launcher, users of the Nova Launcher can now swipe to open a drawer. The 5.0 version adds a new search view, featuring tabs for Frequent, Recent and New/Updated apps. There's also support for Android 7.1 Nougat's launcher shortcuts, along with a new "Timeout" screen lock method, a new quick start feature to change major settings faster and much more. Some of these feature have already been made available for people who have tried out the beta version.

Wade says it may take a few hours for the 5.0 update to make its way through the normal Google Play Store. Keep in mind that you can unlock a number of extra features with the Nova Launcher Prime app that's also available for $4.99.

Get it at Google Play


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Turn your big-screen TV into an Android touchscreen with Touchjet Wave

A company called Touchjet is now selling a rather interesting product that it claims can turn a big-screen television into an Android-based touchscreen device. The Touchjet Wave is available to pre-order now from Best Buy for $299.99.

The product clips onto the top of the television, and works on most big-screen TVs up to 65 inches in size with resolutions up to 4K. It basically puts an image of an Android device on top of the TV, which can be interacted with by touching the screen, via its optical touch sensor. It can also be controlled by using a remote smartphone app if you don't want to get your screen dirty with fingerprints.

The company is pitching this device as a way for businesses to have a large touchscreen interactive device for much less than the solutions that are currently available, such as Microsoft's Surface Hub. However, it is also marketing the Touchjet Wave as a consumer product for turning the family room TV into a big Android tablet.

That's the cool news. The not-so-cool news is that the hardware inside the Touchjet Wave is not exactly high-end. The device only supports four touch points, and it has just 2GB of RAM and only 16GB of on-board storage, and there doesn't appear to be any way to expand that storage. Finally, the device's UI is based on the very old Android 4.4 KitKat.

The Touchjet Wave is supposed to start shipping from Best Buy starting sometime next week.

Get it at Best Buy


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Fossil hybrid smartwatch lineup expands with Diesel, Armani and Kate Spade models

Fossil continues to launch a boatload of new hybrid smartwatch products, and today it officially announced plans for three more brands to join its Q lineup. The Diesel, Kate Spade and the previously revealed Emporio Armani connected watches are all scheduled to go on sale sometime in late 2016 or early 2017.

See also:

Best smartwatches

1 day ago

While Fossil has released full Android Wear-based smartwatches in the past, with its Michael Kors brand, these new fashion-oriented hybrids hide their tech features. Each of these new brands comes with its own app for Android and iOS, and can offer users features like message notifications, fitness tracking and more. The batteries inside are designed to last up to six months.

Pocket-Lint reports that the new DieselOn Time watch comes in a stainless steel casing, and can be bought with five different color options for its strap. The Kate Spade watch will have three models to choose from (gold, rose gold and silver) and the Emporio Armani Connected watch will be sold in five different models.

Fossil says the Kate Spade watch will cost $250 when it goes on sale. The previously announced Emporio Armani Connected costs between $245 and $400, depending on the model. So far, no price has been revealed for the DieselOn Time watch.



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Google Maps may be adding new location sharing features

Google Maps is certainly one of the most used Android apps, and it looks like the company is planning to add a few big features in the near future. A new report claims that an internal test build shows that the app could be adding some location sharing features.

See also:

Create Location-Aware Android Apps with Google Maps

3 weeks ago

The report, from Ausdroid, says that this internal Google Maps version now has a "friends" section in the menu that will allow users to show their buddies where they are currently located. The report says that the app allows for new friends to be added, and others to be removed from the list. There's also a new "navigation sharing" option in the app's settings that can be turned on and off.

The report also shows a "hands free faster route" option that, when turned on, will allow the app to ask the user to say "Yes" or "No" if it finds a quicker way to get from A to B. Finally, Google is apparently working to store searches and direction info offline, which could make Google Maps run faster.

Keep in mind that this report is based on a build of Google Maps that is supposed to be under internal testing. As a result, any of its features may or may not actually appear in future public versions of the app.  However, these new additions under development would certainly be welcome ones for users when and if they are officially released.



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Cyanogen: where did it go wrong?

As we've seen, there's a dichotomy in the smartphone world. On the one hand, you have the tightly-wound iOS, an operating system that always looks and feels the same. On the other, you've got Android, the open-source operating system that can be many different things to many different people. In fact, last year iOS and Android were found to make up 96 percent of the smartphone market; and don't forget that Windows phones exist in that remaining 4 percent.

These days, it's quite easy to forget that CyanogenMod used to be a major player in the Android market — to hobbyists and the modding community, it still is — and the parent company, Cyanogen, Inc., had grand plans to take over the Android world with a more commercial version of the community-built ROM. There was, in fact, a time when Cyanogen was nearly as synonymous with smartphones as Android, at least among more hardcore folks, but that time has long since passed.

If you recall, Cyanogen's popularity grew quickly, and the company started talking a pretty big game. In retrospect, it seems that many of the company's ambitions have failed to come to fruition. The fate of the company as a whole has become quite questionable. In light of recent developments and several years of disappointments, let's take a look back at the history of Cyanogen, Inc. to answer some important questions: Why hasn't the company's promises come to fruition? What is the company doing today? Where is it going in the future? And where did it all go wrong?

See also:

Cyanogen OS vs Android: what's the difference?

July 27, 2016

A strong, community-oriented start

Before there was Cyanogen, Inc., there was only CyanogenMod. Even if you're not personally familiar with CyanogenMod, you've at least heard of it: It's the Android-based operating system that first emerged in 2009. Shortly after the T-Mobile G1/HTC "Dream" was released and became a huge success, a community of developers began making modified versions of Android when they exploited a weakness in the OS that granted them administrator, or "root", privileges.

It wasn't the first modified version of Android to be released, but it was definitely the first to gain such immense popularity. As a result, a growing number of developers and hobbyists rallied around CyanogenMod, contributing their skills and knowledge to create something that many would come to prefer to stock Android.

With CyanogenMod, mainstream Android users could enjoy the stability and full power of Android with the customization and added features that the couldn't get from stock Android.

In just over a year, CyanogenMod evolved through five different versions. With each new version came advanced features, including gesture controls, tethering, and a growing library of supported devices. Meanwhile, CyanogenMod gained its own identity with a unique launcher and reputation for offering levels of customization that weren't available on Android.

CyanogenMod also changed the way that people viewed custom Android ROMs. Previously, custom ROMs were popular to enthusiasts, but less so among mainstream users. With CyanogenMod, mainstream Android users could enjoy the stability and full power of Android with the customization and added features that the couldn't get from stock Android.

Google in the crosshairs

For a while, that's all there was to it. CyanogenMod gained a group of top-tier developers, including co-founders Steve Kondik and Kirt McMaster. These top-level developers would make the final decisions when it came to adding or changing any facets of CyanogenMod, but it otherwise remained an operating system "by the people, for the people", as Kondik would say.

Cyanogen Inc. raised $80 million from a number of well-known investors, including Twitter and Qualcomm

In September 2013, Kondik announced Cyanogen, Inc., a venture-funded company created for the purpose of commercializing — or, more accurately, monetizing — CyanogenMod. This coincided with the launch of Cyanogen OS, a more commercial version of the community-driven firmware that could come preinstalled on new devices. Sure enough, the acclaimed OnePlus One launched in the spring of 2014 with either CyanogenMod 12 or Cyanogen OS on board, depending on where you were located. This had the effect of raising the profile of Cyanogen, Inc., and the success the company experienced in its early days seems to have bolstered the confidence of Kondik and McMaster, the latter of whom would go on to make some pretty bold claims.

An interview with Kirt McMaster — who's no longer the Cyanogen CEO — by Forbes staff writer Miguel Helft was published in the April 13, 2015, edition of the renowned magazine. In the interview, McMaster made the now-infamous claim that he intended for Cyanogen's mobile operating systems to serve as a "bullet through Google's head." In hindsight, McMaster was likely fired-up after having raised $80 million from a number of well-known investors, including Twitter and Qualcomm; and this doesn't account for the close partnership Cyanogen would begin with Microsoft. So it might have seemed reasonable to proclaim how the popular CyanogenMod and its sibling Cyanogen OS would soon upset the mobile phone industry in spite of such humble beginnings. However, it certainly didn't play out the way McMaster believed it would.

The OnePlus One shipped with Cyanogen OS out of the box, but the relationship wouldn't last.

A curious case of misdirection

It feels like ages it's been since McMaster was talking bullets through heads, but that Forbes interview was printed less than two years ago; meanwhile, that bullet has very clearly missed. Perhaps it feels like the interview was so long ago because it's been at least that long since Cyanogen was featured in a positive news headline.

After the launch of the OnePlus One, Cyanogen and OnePlus had a gruesome and very public breakup. First, there was the issue of the OnePlus One being sold in India where Cyanogen-based ROMs had an exclusive deal with Micromax; no other OEMs could sell devices running Cyanogen software in the country. There were also some really personal insults being flung between the two companies, but primarily from Kondik and McMaster toward OnePlus. According to McMaster, OnePlus built its brand and success off the back of Cyanogen, Inc. In fact, he even went so far as to say that OnePlus would've been lucky to sell a single device in international markets if it weren't for the more-recognizable Cyanogen brand.

While the dissolution of the Cyanogen-OnePlus partnership would appear to be a minor speedbump, Cyanogen OS has launched on only a very small number of devices by the likes of YU and Wileyfox. (Meanwhile, OnePlus has struggled to meet the demand for its OnePlus 3 and 3T devices. Go figure.)

While the dissolution of the Cyanogen-OnePlus partnership would appear to be a minor speedbump, Cyanogen OS has launched on only a very small number of devices.

Surrounding the debacle with OnePlus, it became apparent that Cyanogen has big plans, but didn't know how to implement them. In recent years, there have been constant rumors about ongoing layoffs from within the company and many Cyanogen developers feeling they have little to no job security.

In a change that comes too little too late, McMaster was demoted from CEO of Cyanogen, Inc., at which time former COO Lior Tal stepped into the position. Kondik, too, was removed from the management board and it seems that the number of days he has left in his own company are quite numbered. He recently posted on the private CyanogenMod developers' group on Google+, during which he admitted to much of what we had been suspecting. Specifically, Kondik said that Cyanogen, Inc., was extremely mismanaged, McMaster's behavior and comments were a source of frequent turmoil for the company, and the executives could never seem to agree on the direction of the company.

According to Cyanogen Inc co-founder Steve Kondik, McMaster was unhappy and a source of conflict within the company.

According to Kondik, McMaster was unhappy in the position and a source of conflict within the company, making it a difficult place in which to work. In fact, Kondik goes on to allege that McMaster's behavior was an attempt at sabotaging his own company. Kondik doesn't explicitly state whether he's leaving Cyanogen, Inc., but his departure seems to be implied. In his soliloquy, Kondik laments that he made poor decisions, trusted the wrong people, and got screwed over as is "the Silicon Valley way". It sounds as much like a goodbye letter as an apology and justification, and Kondik goes on to express his uncertainty at what his next steps might be. While I'm sure he'd like to maintain some semblance of ownership of CyanogenMod, it would be difficult to untangle the community-created operating system from the rest of the company.

Kondik's statement comes in the wake of what was already a rather difficult week for Cyanogen. Just a couple days ago, we learned that Cyanogen, Inc. would be closing its Seattle offices at the end of the year. Of course, this had been rumored for some time with sources on the inside claiming that the company will be moving to apps rather than continuing development of the operating system that was its namesake.

Where will Cyanogen go from here?

At this point, the future of Cyanogen, Inc. is pretty uncertain. With CyanogenMod being largely in the community's hands, it's likely that CyanogenMod will continue is much the same way as it always has. The problem, which Kondik mentioned in his statement, has to do with what level of ownership the company has over the Cyanogen/CyanogenMod branding and trademarks.

Recently, the company has started pushing its "modular OS", which appears to consist of breaking Cyanogen OS down into individual components, or mods, that OEMs and developers can mix and match or incorporate into their own operating systems. Having spoken to members of the PR department in recent weeks, it seemed the company was extremely excited about the prospect of OS modularity. However, given what insiders have alleged, it's likely that Cyanogen will abandon operating systems altogether if this modular operating system doesn't work out.

See also:

Is CyanogenMod about to become Lineage Android Distribution?

10 hours ago

Now I'd like to hear from you: What are your thoughts on the situation with Cyanogen, Inc.? What do you think we might see from Cyanogen in the future? Leave your thoughts and questions in the comments below.



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LG rumored to launch new X, K and Stylus phones at CES 2017

Believe it or not, CES 2017 is just a few weeks away. The annual electronics trade show in Las Vegas begins in early January, and a new rumor claims LG plans to pre-announce several new Android smartphones next week ahead of their CES debut.

Also read: What we're going to see at CES 2017

The new phones, according to a new report from VentureBeat, won't be high-end flagship devices like the G5 or V20, but rather new models in LG's lower-end X, K and Stylus families. A whopping four new K phones are rumored to be revealed soon. The story says these new 2017 models will have the following features:

  • K3 –  4.5-inch, 5MP rear and 2MP front-facing cameras, 2100mAh battery
  • K4 – 4.7-inch, 8MP rear and 5MP front-facing cameras, 2500mAh battery
  • K8 – 5.0-inch HD display, 13MP rear and 5MP front-facing cameras, 2500mAh battery
  • K10 – 5.3-inch HD display, 2.5D glass on front and back, 5MP wide-angle, front-facing camera, fingerprint reader

The report says that all the new LG K 2017 phones will go on sale sometime in mid-January.

In addition, the company may reveal a new phone called the LG X calibur as part of its CES plans. It will be a new rugged phone with an IP68 water and dust resistance rating, as well as a 4100mAh battery. It is supposed to be released in March.

Another new LG phone is supposed to make its debut at CES – the LG Stylus 3. The report says this new phone will be called the Stylo 3 plus in the US, and will have a digital pen included for its 5.7-inch display. The report also says it will have 32GB of on-board storage, a 13MP rear camera, a 5MP front camera, a 3200mAh battery and a fingerprint reader. This phone is supposed to be launched in February.

Finally, the report adds that LG will wait until the Mobile World Congress trade show in late February to officially reveal the X power 2 phone. It is supposed to have a 5.5-inch display, a 13MP rear camera, a 5MP wide-angle front camera and a 4500mAh battery. The report says it will launch in April. VentureBeat did not mention prices for any of LG's new phones.



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Deal: Complete Java Programming Bootcamp $39 (ending soon!)

The AAPicks team writes about things we think you'll like, and we may see a share of revenue from any purchases made through affiliate links.

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