Showing posts with label google. Show all posts
Showing posts with label google. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 24, 2016

Googles new app, Science Journal, for conducting scientific experiments on your smartphone.

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Google has just released its new app, "Science Journal" that is basically a clipboard for scientific field experiments. The app can be used to record data in real time and then convert them to easily readable graphs and charts. 



 The app is equipped with helpful tools like an accelerometer, and light and sound meters, that can be used to gather information during tests. Project progress and data can also be saved on the app to be previewed later or continued in cases of incomplete projects.




Google is also making hands-on learning kits to accompany the app. These would contain external sensors, microcontrollers and craft supplies that would help kids perform more detailed experiments. The app is now available on Google play.



Friday, May 13, 2016

Gboard: search for information, GIFs and emojis straight form your keypad

Google today released an app for iOS devices called "GBoard" that allows you to perform Google searches directly from your keypad. It allows users to send information like weather forecasts, business listings, locations, and more, as well as GIFs, and of course emojis straight from your keypad saving you the trouble of exiting your screen to open a browser or the google app before performing the same operations.


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source: Techcrunch




It even allows you to search for emojis rather than scrolling through the sea of available ones to find the one you're looking for. It also has glide typing, which allows you to type by sliding your finger from letter to letter.


source: google blog
The functionalities of this app definitely come in handy, considering stats from eMarketer that states that mobile device users this year will spend 3 hours 15 minutes per day using apps and just 51 minutes using browsers.

This app is currently available for download at the App store but is only available in English 


Thursday, November 13, 2014

Google Chromecast Users can now play "Family Friendly" multiplayer Games

"Just in time for the Holidays", Google on Tuesday added a number of "Family Friendly games" that can be controlled via smartphones and tablets, and Showtime Anytime, and Starz for a wider range of shows.

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Categories have also been added to the chromecast app page to make it easier for users to find what they are looking for. Users can choose from TV & Movies, Music & Audio, Games, Sports, Photos & Video, or More.

The new 'family-friendly games' for Chromecast include Wheel of Fortune, Hasbro's Monopoly Dash, Scrabble Blitz, Connect Four Quads and Simon Swipe. As with other Chromecast apps, users can use their Android or iOS smartphones and tablets as game controllers.

Google has also added the mobile version of the Kinect-based dancing game 'Just Dance Now', which uses the motion sensors on a mobile device to translate body movements - with no need for extra controllers. Users with Android and iOS devices can also download these applications from their respective app stores.

Monday, April 28, 2014

Google releases update on how their self driving cars work

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For those of you who do not already know about Google's self driving cars, this might be a bit of a jaw dropper, but its still true. As true as...well its true.

so now that we are clear with that, the news is that Google has come out with how the whole thing works. Here is the video:

Wednesday, February 19, 2014

Google Glass advice: how to avoid being a glasshole

Google’s smartglass guidelines for early adopters: stop being creepy, don’t be rude, and don’t try to read War and Peace



Google explains how to not be a 'glasshole' wearing the company's pioneering smart glasses. Photograph: Pawel Supernak/EPA

Google has given some official advice on what to do and perhaps more importantly, what not to do, while wearing the company’s Google Glass smartglasses to avoid being a “glasshole”.
Early adopters of Glass, derogatorily called “glassholes”, have come under fire for using it in socially unacceptable conditions where mobile phones aren’t allowed, for being creepy filming people without their permission and for being rude, staring off into the distance for long periods of time.
Glass has gone far beyond the confines of Google employees with its extended “Explorer” early adopter programme. As Google states, it is definitely in the company’s best interest to get its first smartglass customers to behave, as “breaking the rules or being rude will not get businesses excited about Glass and will ruin it for other Explorers”.
To try and help Explorers avoid being glassholes and breaking social codes, Google has compiled a list of solid suggestions pulled from the experiences of early Glass adopters, and some of them are really quite funny.

Stop looking like a tech zombie

Glass was designed to avoid the need to stare down at a smartphone or device to get information, placing snippets of text just outside your field of vision, but that can have some pretty creepy consequences.If you find yourself staring off into the prism for long periods of time you’re probably looking pretty weird to the people around you.
Google helpfully suggests that reading things like Tolstoy’s 1,225 pages of War and Peace probably isn’t the best idea, suggesting that “things like that are better done on bigger screens”.

Use some common sense

Google encourages Explorers to try Glass in all kinds of situations, but it would probably be best to avoid activities that could see wearers land on their faces.Glass is a piece of technology, so use common sense. Water-skiing, bull-riding or cage-fighting with Glass are probably not good ideas.
At $1,500 (£900) a piece, Glass might be hi-tech but it is not exactly robust when it comes to high-impact sports.

Glass probably doesn’t contribute to a romantic meal

The idea of smartglasses being worn in public is new, and people are curious. Passersby will stop and stare, ask questions or maybe even react badly if you turn to face them, so Google helpfully suggests that taking Glass off might be the best idea.If you’re worried about someone interrupting that romantic dinner at a nice restaurant with a question about Glass, just take it off and put it around the back of your neck or in your bag.
Of course, you also have the fact that your date might be creeped out that you have a head-mounted camera pointed at them all night, regardless of whether or not you are recording their every move.

Stop standing in the corner of the room being creepy

Apparently the temptation to record the every move of people going about their day is insatiable for some Glass Explorers. Google suggests that Glass wearers should treat the camera function like they would a mobile phone camera – ask permission and stop being creepy.“Standing alone in the corner of a room staring at people while recording them through Glass is not going to win you any friends.”
Some people are pretty tetchy when it comes to being caught on camera, just ask the paparazzi.
source: the guardian