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Android TV's next big update will improve picture-in-picture viewing - Engadget Posted: 12 May 2022 09:03 AM PDT Google isn't just showering affection on Android phones and tablets at I/O 2022. The company has detailed updates for Android 13 on TV, including one for living room multitaskers. On top of already announced plans to support casting from Android to Google TV, Google has revealed that Android TV will expand picture-in-picture viewing to show group call videos, add a docked mode and prevent chats from hiding content in other apps. You could catch up with family on a camera-equipped TV without blocking your web browser. The future Android TV release will also support different keyboard layouts. That could be helpful for game developers who need to map input to non-QWERTY physical keyboards, Google said. You should also expect performance and quality boosts thanks to improved audio routing and HDMI responses. Developers can grab Android 13 TV beta 2 today for either Google's ADT-3 kit or a computer-based emulator. You'll likely have to wait until later in the year for the finished Android TV update to arrive. As with Android 13 on mobile devices, this isn't a major overhaul — it's more of a refinement to help keep up with modern expectations. All products recommended by Engadget are selected by our editorial team, independent of our parent company. Some of our stories include affiliate links. If you buy something through one of these links, we may earn an affiliate commission. |
Google Pixel tablet may be a half-decent iPad alternative, and I welcome it - 9to5Mac Posted: 12 May 2022 04:49 AM PDT For years now, Google hasn't seemed particularly interested in the tablet market, but yesterday the company announced that it's working on what might be the company's first real iPad alternative – a new Pixel tablet due for launch sometime next year. Apple getting some serious iPad competition could be just the thing we need to finally spur the company into taking iPadOS more seriously, and having the software catch up with the hardware … Google's lack of interest in tablets of lateThe last Google-branded Android tablet was the Pixel C, launched way back in 2015. This had a lot in common with iPads: great hardware, with the operating system failing to really do it justice.
It was discontinued in 2017, and the only tablet Google has launched since then was the 2018 Pixel Slate, which was a ChromeOS device, not an Android one. A year later, the company reportedly ceased work on new tablets. 2023 Pixel tablet planDuring yesterday's I/O event, Google revealed that it is now coming back into the tablet business, and plans to release a Pixel tablet sometime in 2023. The company revealed very little about the hardware, but did provide a sneak peek at the form factor – and the unsurprising news that it would be powered by the same Tensor chip it uses for Pixel phones. I mean, don't get me wrong; based on these renders, Google still has a lot to learn from Apple on the design front. The device has the rounded back of the older iPads, making it look rather old-fashioned, and the bezels don't look as slim as those on the iPad Pro. But it's still a big step in the right direction. One thing the company has got right, and I really wish Apple would learn from, is that the front-facing camera is on the long edge, putting it at the top of the device in landscape mode. It's even more ridiculous that Apple insists iPads are vertical devices when it makes keyboards that work in landscape mode. Some tablet-focused software news, tooThere are decent third-party Android tablets out there – like Samsung's Galaxy Tab S8 series. But these are again let down by poor Android software support for larger screens. However, Google does finally seem to be making some headway there, too, updating and optimizing 20 of its own Android apps for use on a tablet.
The company has also been very slowly working on improving the multitasking experience on Android tablets. A decent iPad alternative is good news for iPad ownersFor too long, Apple has been able to rest on its laurels as the Default Tablet. Sure, it's continued to develop the hardware, but as we've often said, the software capabilities remain way behind, both before and after iPadOS. Google making its own tablet is likely to lead to further developments on the software side, to take full advantage of a larger screen – and that will hopefully prod Apple into doing the same. A great Google tablet with a great Android experience for a larger screen is exactly what iPad fans need: serious competition to force Apple into giving us a user experience that takes full advantage of the hardware. Even a halfway decent Google tablet, with third-party ones made more capable by a better Android tablet experience, would achieve the same thing. As an iPad fan, I look forward to the launch of the Pixel tablet. |
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