Chris Hoffman is Editor-in-Chief of How-To Geek. He’s written about technology for over a decade and was a PCWorld columnist for two years. Chris has written for The New York Times, been interviewed as a technology expert on TV stations like Miami’s NBC 6, and had his work covered by news outlets like the BBC. Since 2011, Chris has written over 2,000 articles that have been read nearly one billion times—and that’s just here at How-To Geek. Read more.
Google Now, new in Android 4.1 Jelly Bean, is Google’s attempt to be smarter. It includes cards that automatically provide you with information and voice search integrated with Google’s knowledge graph to provide direct answers to your questions.
Google is adamant that you shouldn’t have to configure Google Now – it will learn about you and the information you want over timeas you go through your commute and perform searches. However, you can still tweak its settings if you want.
Accessing Google Now
To access Google Now, touch the home button at the bottom of your device’s screen and swipe up to (or beyond) the “Google” circle. You can also quickly access Google Now from the lock screen (assuming you’re not using a PIN or pattern to password-protect your device) by swiping up from the lock icon.
Google Now can also be opened by tapping the Google search widget at the top of your home screen or launching the Google app located in your app drawer.
How Cards Work
Cards appear at the bottom of the Google Now screen. Cards are Google Now’s attempt to provide you with information that you’ll find useful, without you having to ask for it. By default, you’ll see an automatically-updated weather card for your current location.
Google Now tries to learn more about you over time. Google says you shouldn’t have to configure cards; they’ll just appear automatically – although you can configure them, if you want.
For example, if you’re near a train station or bus stop, Google Now will show you the schedule of the trains or busses that arrive. If you regularly drive between work and home, Google Now will learn their locations and the hours you go, and display an estimate of how long it will take to get there in current traffic, along with suggesting other routes.
Many of these features are more useful with a cellular data connection, of course – if you’re using a Nexus 7, you won’t be able to get automatically updated information when you’re away from Wi-Fi connections.
Other cards that appear are based on searches you perform. For example, if you search for a flight number, Google Now will notice you want that flight schedule and will display updated information as a card. If you search for sports scores for your favorite team, Google Now will notice you’re interested in that team and display updated scores in card form.
Configuring Cards
To view a full list of cards that can appear in Google Now and see when they’ll appear, tap the Show sample cards link at the bottom of the screen.
Tap the Sample card link to see what a type of card will look like when it appears.
Tap the Settings link if you want to customize a card. For example, you can disable any of the cards here entirely, or control when one appears. For the traffic card, you can hide it when you’re traveling, for example.
You can also control settings for the individual cards, which will vary depending on the card – for example, if you use public transit to get to work instead of driving there, you can set the traffic card’s transportation mode to “public transit.”
More cards will likely be added in future versions of Google Now, and the capabilities of current cards will likely be enhanced.
Using Voice Search
Google Now includes a Google search box – searches you perform from this box (or the widget on the home screen) provide Google Now with the information it uses to choose cards. You can tap this box and type a query normally, but it also supports voice search.
To start a voice search from the Google Now screen, simply say “Google” out loud. This will activate voice search, and you can ask your question or speak your query.
You can also tap the microphone in the search box here — either in Google Now or on your home screen — to activate voice search.
Speak a question and Google will try to provide you with an answer using its knowledge graph. For many queries where Google knows the answer, Google will speak an answer back to you in addition to showing it on your screen.
The classic “Do I need an umbrella?” search works, too. Google will tell you yes or no, along with showing you the exact weather.
Unit conversions and other calculations also work, just as they would on Google’s search page.
Google will show you results from its other properties when appropriate. For example, tell Google you want a specific type of food and Google will display nearby restaurants that serve that type of food.
Search for pictures of something and Google will show you image results direct from Google Images.
If Google doesn’t know how to answer your question, it will perform a Google search for it, which is often useful. Expect Google Now’s voice search to improve over time as Google’s Knowledge Graph continues to improve.
Android 6.0’s big hallmark feature is Google Now on Tap. Part of Google Now, Now on Tap allows Google to scan the screen whenever you open it, automatically guessing what you want to search for and providing you with more information.
Aside from user-manageable app permissions — something Apple has offered from day one with the iPhone — this is the most important and interesting new feature in Android 6.0 Marshmallow.
What is Now on Tap?
Google Now has been creeping further and further into Android with each release. On modern Android devices — at least the ones using the Google Now launcher, which you can install on any device from Google Play — you can access Google Now by swiping to the right on the home screen. Google Now provides you with information it thinks you might want to see — everything from package and airline tracking details based on the emails you’ve received to the weather in your area and directions to home or work, depending on the time of the day. You might also see directions to a location you’ve recently searched for or the latest scores from sports teams you’ve searched for.
This is essentially Google’s competitor to Apple’s Siri and Microsoft’s Cortana. Google puts a high value on providing information before you have to ask for it, something Microsoft is doing with Cortana and Apple is only now beginning to do with Siri in iOS 9.
Now on Tap extends that even further. Android apps can expose their data to Now on Tap. When you open Now on Tap, it scans the screen for the information you might want to know more about and suggests relevant “cards.”
For example, let’s say you’re listening to a song in an app. Pulling up Now on Tap might present you with more information about the artist. Or, let’s say you’re having text conversation and someone mentions a restaurant. Pulling up Now on Tap will show you a card about the restaurant so you can see reviews and directions.
That’s the goal here — rather than manually performing a search for the person, location, or something else of interest, you pull up Now on Tap and it automatically searches for what you want. Of course, it isn’t perfect, especially in its first release.
How to Use Now on Tap
To use Now on Tap, just press the Home button and hold it down. This shortcut previously opened Google Now, but it now goes straight to Now on Tap. The first time you do this, you’ll be asked to turn this feature on.
On some devices, you might need to use another shortcut. You should be able to use whatever shortcut opens Google Now — for example, that may be a double-press of the Home button on some devices. Only Google’s Nexus devices currently have Android 6.0 Marshmallow, so we’re not completely sure how Samsung and other Android device manufacturers will implement this.
Google recommends you try this “with people, places, and movies.” If an app — or even just a webpage in Google Chrome — mentions a people, place, or movie, you should be able to see immediate information about it through a long-press of the Home button.
You can also say “Ok Google” or tap and the mic and ask a question based on what’s on the screen after opening Now on Tap. For example, while listening to a song in an app, you can open Now on Tap and then say something like “Ok Google, what’s her real name?” or “Ok Google, how old is he?” Google Now will perform a search based on the information in Now on Tap. In this case, it should see that you’re listening to music by a specific artist and perform a search for that artist’s real name or age and answer your question.
It’s that simple — the shortcut that previously opened Google Now now opens Now on Tap. You can still access the main Google Now screen from your home screen, the Google search app, or notifications that arrive on your Android device. You can also tap the “G” button at the bottom of the Now on Tap screen to go to the Google Now interface.
This will get much more useful over time as more third-party Android apps opt into this feature and as Google extends Google Now on Tap to understand more types of data. For now, Google’s Now on Tap shows what’s possible with the deep integration of Google’s “knowledge graph” into the Android operating system. Android is becoming more and more integrated with Google’s services.
You don’t have to leave an app to start a new search
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Share All sharing options for: Google Now on Tap might just be the killer feature of Android Marshmallow
Smartphones keep getting better. That’s a fact. They get nicer displays, cameras that put point-and-shoots to shame and, hopefully, better battery life.
But what about smartphones getting smarter? On the software side, companies like Apple and Google have been trying to make the smartphone experience much more intuitive — Apple with proactive Siri suggestions in iOS 9, and now Google with something called “Now on Tap” in Android Marshmallow.
We’ve seen Now on Tap before. Google first showed it off at its annual developers conference this past May, and we did a deep dive into Google’s plans for Marshmallow then (codenamed “M” at the time). Since the spring, Google has made impressive strides in actually bringing Now on Tap to life.
Now on Tap officially launches today
It officially launches today as part of the release of Android Marshmallow. It’s rolling out to Nexus phones and tablets first, and will become available to other Android devices in the coming weeks.
The Now on Tap feature is part of Google Now, something that Google launched a few years ago as a kind of intelligent assistant to Android phone users. Have a bunch of meetings lined up, or a long drive ahead of you? Google Now will automatically tell you what time you need to leave in order to beat traffic, where your next meeting is, how to get there, and so on. It’s an opt-in feature — some people are, understandably, a little freaked out at the notion of Google having access to so much of their personal data — but in my experience, it does make the Android experience more powerful.
Now on Tap takes that even further. The idea is that you can get more information and take action from directly within an application. You no longer have to leave one app to run a search in another, or to use a mobile web browser. The most interesting part of Now on Tap might be that Google is actually giving you a way to eschew organic search; other options are right there for you.
In the hour-long demo I had with Now on Tap last week, I was able to go from someone’s Instagram page to their Twitter page, and from a Viber message about going to see a band to that band’s music, without having to “leave” the app or run a new search.
Here’s another example: During the demo I opened a message in Facebook Messenger suggesting an outing to see The Martian. When I pressed and held down the home button, Now on Tap showed me a myriad of information options. Did I want to go to the IMDb page? Watch the trailer on YouTube? Or just go to Chrome and read more about it? What was more impressive (or creepy, depending on how you view it) is that Now on Tap knew that I was looking for information about the movie — not the book. But, in case I did want to know more about the book, I could run a Google voice search from within the app and ask who wrote The Martian.
Now on Tap knew that I was looking for information about the movie — not the book
Aparna Chennapragada, who leads up Google Now, says stuff like that is due to improved natural language processing in Google Now. Google sees the word “see” and knows the context of the query — in this case, that it’s referring to a movie. It’s also what enables Now on Tap to make calendar appointment suggestions directly, too.
But it’s not a totally seamless experience yet, by any means. Certain apps, like Twitter, keep you trapped in the app after using Now on Tap to get there, so when you hit the back button you stay within the app rather than going back to your original Now on Tap query.
And in some cases, the app page you’re on might not have enough information to lead to robust Now on Tap results. For example, I googled myself (who doesn’t) using Chrome, went to a Verge story I recently wrote and from there pressed Now on Tap. The result? An option to search for Chromecast (the story was about Chromecast, ironically enough), but no options to, say, watch a Verge video on YouTube.
After using it briefly, it’s easy to see the potential for other use cases, like commerce. If someone can go from a restaurant page directly to an Open Table booking right now using Now on Tap, or from a movie trailer to the Fandango app, it doesn’t seem unfeasible that Now on Tap would eventually take you to more purchasing options.
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Google Now On Tap Updated To Allow For Easy Screenshots On Android 6.0
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Taking screenshots has officially become a little easier for those of us who have a device running Android 6.0. An update has begun to roll out to the Google App that adds a share button to Google Now on tap, which takes a screenshot and allows you to immediately share it. This is great news for some who have been having issues taking screenshots on their 6P while using certain cases, and for those who have trouble pressing multiple buttons at once. Let’s take a quick look at how this works, and how it compares to the regular way of doing things.
Once you activate Now on tap by holding down the home button, tap on the share icon in the bottom left corner. After a few seconds, you will see the regular screenshot animation, and the share screen will pop up. It’s worth noting that taking a screenshot with this method does not automatically save the image. If you use Google Photos, which is something I recommend to everyone, you can simply choose Upload to Photos to save it to your library. If you want to save the image and your intention is to share it to another app, you will need to go into that app and save it manually.
There are a couple of differences between taking a screenshot through Google Now on tap and using the hardware buttons. When using Now on tap, icons on the status bar and navigation bar are removed. This makes for nice screenshots that aren’t littered with your notifications. You can see a few examples below. I noticed that taking screenshots with Now on tap can take quite some time, up to 8 seconds between pressing the share button and having the share menu pop up. It isn’t consistently slow, but it’s a slight annoyance.
Screenshots via Now on tap
Screenshots via buttons
Not everyone is seeing this feature quite yet. You must be on Android 6.0+ and have Google App v5.7.13, which you can grab from APK Mirror here. If you have this version and don’t see the new button, it’s because there is a server-side switch for this feature. Feel free to join the beta here for early updates in the future.
Android 6.0 Marshmallow is out now. This is everything you need to know about Google’s mobile operating system update.
A new year, a new version of Android. For 2015, the candy-themed update is all about behind-the-scenes tweaks and a few blockbuster features.
With Android 6.0 Marshmallow, as it’s officially called, Google focused on a few big new features, like Now on Tap, and smaller changes for better battery life and performance. Instead of a completely revamped look, the operating system uses the same colorful Material design theme introduced with Android 5.0 Lollipop last year.
Here’s what’s new in the update, which rolls out today to Nexus phones first.
Editors’ note, October 7, 2015: This post has been updated to remove the landscape homescreen feature which was in a developer preview, but did not make it to the final release of the OS.
6 reasons to get excited for Android 6.0 Marshmallow
Now on Tap
Google Now is more accessible and helpful than it’s ever been. Now on Tap is a new feature that pulls up extra information in top of whatever you’re doing, based on what’s on your screen.
It’s essentially an “easy button” for your phone and here’s how it works. Press and hold the home button on your phone — Google says it should work on a variety of phones with both onscreen and physical home buttons. You’ll see a short animation and then a small card (0r cards) will appear, giving you information and app shortcuts.
What’s on the cards depends on what’s on your screen. For example, if you’re texting a friend about where to meet for dinner, mention a restaurant name in your message and then activate Now on Tap, the card will give you options to call the restaurant, find it on Google Maps, or view reviews on Yelp. Or if you’re looking at email plans to see a movie, Now on Tap will show ratings, links to the movie’s page in the IMDB app and a YouTube to link to the trailer.
Now on Tap includes shortcuts to apps on your phone, where appropriate. For instance, with the OpenTable app installed, you’ll be able to use an OpenTable shortcut from the Now on Tap card to book a table. If you’re looking at a card about a famous person and tap the Twitter shortcut, it will load that person’s profile page in the app on your device. This deep-linking technology is something that Google’s been working on a for a while and it really shines with this new feature.
Another part of Now on Tap is that you can run a voice search and Google will use the context of what’s on the screen to give you results. A great example is if you’re looking at a restaurant in the Foursquare app and ask Google how far it is from you. Google knows you are referring to the restaurant on your screen and gives you the right travel times. This also works if you’re playing music on your phone; you can ask for details about the artist or band — “Who’s the lead singer,” “What’s the No. 1 hit?” — without even using their name.
Google Now on Tap aims to do two things; give you quick answers and help you figure out the next step. It’s well designed to appear when you need it and then disappear so you can go back to what you were doing.
Android Pay
Though it’s not only for Android 6.0, the new update goes hand in hand with Android Pay, Google’s new mobile payments system. Android Pay will let you make purchases at participating stores using your phone’s NFC chip. As with Apple Pay, you can hold your phone to the credit card terminal and follow the onscreen prompts to pay. Samsung Pay works a bit differently, allowing you to pay at different kinds of credit card machine, not just those that support NFC.
Android Pay also lets you make purchases on your phone, such as paying for an in-app purchase. Google Wallet, Google’s original mobile payment app, is changing to handle only peer-to-peer payments that you make between friends, family and others.
If your phone has a fingerprint reader, like the new Nexus 5X and Nexus 6P do, you can authorize payments with your print, as you can with iOS. Android Pay works with 700,000 stores, including Walgreens, Macy’s and Best Buy in the US.
Android Pay in action. Google
Power!
Google’s Nexus devices now support the new USB Type-C standard of charging cable. That means it can be charged or can also charge other devices. Better yet, it’s got the same shape on both sides, meaning you won’t have to grapple with which side is “up.”
That’s for charging up, but what about saving power to begin with? Android 6.0 Marshmallow also includes Doze, an automatic energy-saving feature that Google says will use less power than the current standby mode. Basically, if you walk away from your device for a lengthy period of time, it hibernates to save your battery. You’ll still hear important alarms and incoming messages, but with as little as half the power consumption of the earlier version.
6.0’s power-saving features promise better battery life. Screenshot by Sarah Mitroff/CNET
App permissions
In the past, installing an app meant you agreed to let it use whatever parts of your phone it asked to use. Now apps will ask for access to parts of your phone or Google account when they need it, and you can approve those requests or not.
For instance, a messaging app might not ask for permission to use your camera until you try to take and send a photo. This is very similar to how iOS devices handle permissions — apps ask for permission to use your camera, contacts or photos on a need-to-use basis.
This adds additional security to Android and gives you more control over how apps can use your phone’s resources.
Fingerprint support
This feature is a bit more behind-the-scenes, but Google has included support for a fingerprint reader. This allows the Nexus 5X and Nexus 6P to use a fingerprint scanner to unlock your phone as well as apps, plus you can now use your fingerprint to authorize payments.
Redesigned app drawer
The app drawer, the menu where all of the apps installed on your phone or tablet live, has a new layout in Marshmallow. There’s a search bar at the top, where you can quickly find an app. Below that are the apps Google thinks you want to use right now, based on time of day or your typical app-opening habits. The app drawer now scrolls up and down, instead of left and right, which is a bit of throwback to earlier Android versions.
Stay tuned for more
We’re just getting our first tastes of the final release of Android 6.0 Marshmallow. Over the coming weeks, we’ll kick the tires on the new version and update this post with everything you need to know.
Google is releasing a new feature called Heads Up, which has started rolling out to its Digital Wellbeing Android app. Here is how you can set it up.
Google is releasing a new feature called Heads Up, which has started rolling out to its Digital Wellbeing Android app. When you turn on Heads Up, your smartphone will periodically display an alert that will remind you to keep your head up when the app detects you’re walking and using your phone at the same time.
According to XDA Developers, the new feature is being rolled out to Google Pixel devices. Google has been known to test new features on its Pixel smartphones before making the features more widely available with other Android phones. The feature will most probably work the same on other devices when it is available. Here’s how it works.
How to set up Heads Up
1. Open the Settings app on your phone
2. Scroll down until you locate the Digital Wellbeing & parental controls option and then tap it
2. Scroll to the bottom of the various settings until you locate a new Heads Up option, just above the toggle switch to add an app icon for Digital Wellbeing to your app drawer.
4. Tap on Heads Up and follow the setup prompts.
It is important to note that you will need to grant Digital Wellbeing, permission to view your physical activity so the app can identify when you’re walking. The app will also allow you to give app permission to view your current location at all times. When enabled the app should be able to identify when you’re inside.
With the new feature enabled, you will get an alert whenever you use your smartphone while walking and the app detects the same.
Digital Wellbeing beta
Google Pixel device users who are unable to see the Heads Up feature, can join the Digital Wellbeing beta program, which should enable the new feature on their Pixel device. Users can join the beta program by visiting the app’s Play Store listing and installing it.
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Google has finally rolled out its AirDrop alternative called Nearby Sharing for Android smartphones. The feature allows users to transfer files, documents, multimedia content and more via Bluetooth, Wi-Fi or NFC between the two Android smartphones running Android 6.0 or above. In addition to that, the tech-giant has also confirmed the feature for Chrome OS as well. That means Chromebook users will also be able to transfer content using the feature between Android smartphones.
The feature is currently being rolled out officially for Pixel and some Samsung smartphones and it will be expanded to more devices in coming weeks.
However, if you are a little curious to try out the new Nearby Sharing feature on your smartphone before its final rollout, here’s a workaround for you.
To get the Nearby Sharing feature on your Android smartphones, you will need to enrol for Google Play Services beta program and after enrolling, here’s how can use the feature.
How to enrol into Google Play Store beta program
Head to Google Play Store beta program website on your smartphone and click on Become a Tester button. Once enrolled, tap on download it on Google Play option to install the Beta update for Play Services
Note: You can leave the beta program anytime you want and install the public version of Play Services from the same link.
How to enable Nearby Sharing feature on your smartphone
It’s been a busy few weeks for the Android team, as we’ve seen not only the Pixel Feature Drop for June but also Android 12 Beta 2. But Google’s not done just yet, as the company has detailed six new features that are coming to Android this Summer.
Kicking things off, we have the Android Earthquake Alerts System. As the name suggests, this is a built-in alert system to notify you if there is an earthquake taking place in your area, while providing some tips on how to remain safe during and after an earthquake has taken place. The feature was already made available in select countries last year, but now it’s arriving in Turkey, the Philippines, Kazakhstan, the Kyrgyz Republic, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan , and Uzbekistan. Google also stated that it has plans to launch this feature in more countries “over the coming year”.
The next update is for everyone who uses the Google Messages app on their Android phone of choice. Whether you’re in a raucous group chat or just want to save a message for later, you can now star the message. Just tap and hold on to the message, and select the “Star” option. From there, you can access the new Starred category to access all of the messages that you’ve saved.
Gboard is also getting some love, adding even more options to the Emoji kitchen. This is a feature that launched in May allowing users to quickly access recently-used stickers. With the release of the latest Gboard beta, you will now see contextual suggestions for those stickers, making it even easier to share your favorite blob emojis throughout a conversation. The feature will roll out to the stable version of Gboard later this Summer, and works with messages written in English, Spanish, and Portuguese.
New integrations are coming to both Voice Access and Google Assistant. First, you can start asking Google to perform certain tasks like “Hey Google, pay my Capital One bill”, or “Check my miles on Strava. Google is claiming that there will be quite a few more options coming, and you can see all of them by saying “Hey Google, shortcuts”. As for Voice Access, you can finally ask the service to only work when you are looking at the screen with gaze detection. This allows you to “naturally move between talking to friends and using your phone”. There’s also better password input, allowing you to actually spell out the password and enter special characters or symbols where you need to.
Rounding out today’s announcement of features is for the Android Auto users out there. Google is making it possible to further customize your launcher screen by making the changes from your phone, along with providing the ability to manually switch to Dark Mode. Browsing your installed has been improved with new tabs under the media groups, along with an A to Z button in the scroll bar. Finally, Android Auto has been updated with better access to the most popular messaging apps. Starting today, you can read and send messages from different apps like WhatsApp or Messages, instead of fiddling around with your phone or trying to use Google Assistant.
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When you set out to find a new mobile phone, you generally have two options for operating systems: Apple’s iOS or Google’s Android.
They have been the dominant players in the market for years, as others have fallen by the wayside. iOS is naturally only available on Apple devices. But since Android is open-source software, it is used by many brands like Samsung, Huawei and LG. Tap or click to set up this Android privacy feature before you need it.
But a company is now giving you a third option. It’s not a new operating system but rather an Android smartphone that runs without Google’s code. Let’s take a look at how they work.
Here’s the backstory
The /e/ Foundation is tapping into the renewed focus on data privacy by selling “deGoogled” smartphones. Essentially, the company’s /e/OS operating system is Android, with Google utilities stripped out of it.
Currently on sale are refurbished Samsung Galaxy S9 and S8 models, as well as two Fairphone variants. Refurbished means that it has been used before, but quality checks have been done to ensure everything functions properly.
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“Your future smartphone has been used before. Nevertheless, it has been checked and reconditioned to be fully working at our partner’s facilities. We only select smartphones ‘Good-as-New’ so there are no surprises. In total, more than 35 points are checked on each device to guaranty the best possible experience,” the description on the website reads.
What is /e/OS?
Imagine the Android operating system, but you don’t need a Gmail address to sign in or receive updates. Its proprietary software has an open-source Android OS core, but no Google apps or services are loaded onto it.
But if Gmail isn’t on the phone, how do you access your email? The company has made its own versions of the most-used functions like mail, calendar and web browser. All your other Android apps will also work on the phone, as they use the same coding foundation.
And with a focus on privacy, the operating system can scan any app from an app store to calculate how many trackers are in it, what data it collects and the number of permissions the app requires to operate.
Like Google, the /e/ Foundation will provide you with an @e.email account used to back up your data and keep your information safe. The email address comes with 1GB of default storage but can be upgraded if needed.
To have a look at the models with /e/OS on offer, click here to navigate to the official website.