Tidakdidukung pada 6 Desember 2018. Android 4.0 "Ice Cream Sandwich" adalah versi dari Android mobile operating system yang dikembangkan oleh Google. Diluncurkan pada 18 Oktober 2011, Android 4.0 dibuat berdasarkan Android 3.0 "Honeycomb" yang terdapat perubahan signifikan dari rilis ini, dalam upaya membuat sebuah platform yang bisa digunakan di OSIce Cream Sandwich juga mendukung fitur pengenal wajah. Pengguna bisa buka kunci layar dengan wajah. Fitur baru yang ada di OS ini memungkinkan pengguna bisa membatasi pemakaian data dan mematikan aplikasi yang menghabiskan kuota di latar belakang. 10. Android 4.1 - 4.3 (Jelly Bean) Android Jelly Bean dirilis resmi oleh Google pada 27 Juni Notifikasijuga ditingkatkan di Android 4.0 (Ice cream Sandwich). Di layar yang lebih kecil, notifikasi akan muncul di bagian atas layar dan di layar yang lebih besar notifikasi akan muncul di System bar. Pengguna juga dapat mengabaikan pemberitahuan individual. Input suara juga telah ditingkatkan di Android 4.0 (Ice cream Sandwich). Bisniscom, JAKARTA - Pemakai ponsel dengan android versi ice cream sandwich tidak akan bisa pakai whatsapp mulai besok. Apakah Anda salah satu pengguna android versi tersebut? Jika Anda masih belum tahu versi android yang Anda pakai, berikut cara memeriksanya seperti dikutip dari JikaAnda pengguna perangkat Android ber-OS (Operating System) Ice Cream Sandwich, pasti sering mengalami masalah aplikasi dari pihak ketiga yang berjalan buruk. Tahukah Anda bahwa ternyata terdapat solusi sederhana untuk mengatasi masalah Android tersebut. Android4.0, code named Ice Cream Sandwich, was announced Tuesday night by Google and Samsung at a press gathering in Hong Kong. The first phone to run Android 4 is the Samsung Galaxy Nexus, which . Missed the GamesBeat Summit excitement? Don't worry! Tune in now to catch all of the live and virtual sessions here. For too long, Android has been the ugly cousin to Apple’s iOS in terms of design. But with the release of Android Ice Cream Sandwich, all that is changing. For perhaps the first time, “The way things look and make people feel are just as important as the speed and features,” said Matias Duarte, the Chilean-American designer who currently serves as Google’s director of Android user experience, in an interview with VentureBeat. “Every time I unlock the phone and I see how it’s been transformed, it really makes me smile,” he continued. “In previous generations, when I look back, they look dated, like a Windows machine you found in your parents’ garage.” Duarte took some time yesterday to dive deep into the new design language of Ice Cream Sandwich, which is a radical departure from the utilitarian Android UI many consumers are used to seeing. Duarte came to Google about a year and a half ago, shortly before the release of Android Gingerbread. The designer has a lot of mobile experience, having worked at Palm, where he was VP of user experience and helped to create the webOS platform, at Helio as VP of design, and at and Danger, the startup that created the Sidekick and was acquired by Microsoft. The “ugly cousin” stigma Coming into Google, Apple’s main competitor in the world of smartphones, Duarte said he was well aware that Android had been cast in the public imagination as an ugly cousin for years. But whether that perception was true or pure FUD, Duarte knew it needed to be aggressively countered. “Ugly cousin, country bumpkin — we’re intimately aware of that characterization, and it’s something we wanted to tackle head-on with this release,” said Duarte. “We did a lot of foundational research on people’s perceptions of Android. … Hearing it in the words of everyday people helped tell the story of why we needed to make a change and how big a statement we wanted to make.” He said that most consumers have some sense that Android was “utilitarian, a tool, a task, associated with burdens, complications and additional effort. … We weren’t hearing the kind of joy and thanksgiving that we wanted to hear.” To get to that point, Duarte saw a need to shift how Google thought about and communicated about mobile design. He said the company’s goal is now “to make Android respected as a design leader. “There is a PR problem there. There is a perception, however ill-founded, that Google doesn’t care about or understand design and that Android is a place where design isn’t valued. We’re trying to show that’s no longer the case.” However, much of the Android-related marketing from carriers and OEMs still glorifies the utilitarian, technical aspect of the Android OS while downplaying its new, rich aesthetics. Particularly with the Verizon-powered line of Droids, you see commercials featuring post-apocalyptic scenes with robotic arms, lasers and female models who could kick Lara Croft’s ass — hardly in line the user-friendly design language Google is trying to project these days. “There’s clearly a market segment that revels in the joy of tech,” said Duarte. “They want to be Tony Stark, and that’s great. But what I really want to see as well and I hope Ice Cream Sandwich enables this is that it’s easier to make more kinds of products with a broader, emotional appeal, and we’ll see that reflected in [manufacturer and carrier] marketing and customization.” Ice Cream Sandwich’s new design language Beautiful design is one of the three core tenets of the new Android philosophy — or at least, the new Android marketing for Ice Cream Sandwich. And getting from the engineering-focused principles of the original open-source mobile OS to this new, Apple-competitive, consumer-friendly, multimedia-rich interface took a lot of work. We talked to Duarte about how the design language evolved and the kinds of decisions he and his team had to make to get a beautiful smartphone design out of a hacker’s UI. “With Honeycomb, we started the move away from the illustration style of fake wood, fake leather, fake buttons,” he said. “But it was still very technical, very cold. It reveled in its digital roots.” When it came to Ice Cream Sandwich, Duarte said, the team continued to get away from the faux-materials aesthetic, which he called encumbrances, and also got away from a lot of the structure of previous Android iterations. “We removed dividing elements, bevels, unnecessary UI junk,” he said. “We started using more white space and a variety of visual elements to create clear structures.” Another big change with Ice Cream Sandwich is the color. “We expanded our palette, so there’s quite a range of light and dark,” Duarte said. “We’ve introduced two types of palettes that are based on the kind of content you’re consuming. The media content retains a lot of the dark palette that Android used in the past,” he said, noting that the darker colors are still great for videos, photos and other content where you want a visual pop. “Our other palette is light,” he continued. “Gmail, Google Talk, text messaging — all of these have a lighter color pallette that’s more closely aligned with what Google is doing with the web itself. It’s easier to read text on and is simply more approachable.” Overall, the guiding principle was glossy magazine design, an approach that placed more emphasis on beautiful, large images. “We look at each screen and think about the primary experience, then lay it out like a beautiful magazine cover with big pictures, big headlines,” said Duarte. “We make each screen custom so the pages speak to that individual use case.” Duarte said that the new look and feel of Android also involves more transparency in the UI in general. That is, not philosophical transparency, but being able to literally see through various design elements to get a glimpse of the photo or other content behind it. “Very little of the UI imposes a theme on your homescreen,” Duarte concluded. An iOS killer? While Duarte acknowledged early on that Apple’s iOS was the product to beat in terms of design, he also didn’t have that constant competition in mind while creating a new look and feel for Android. “We ask ourselves, when we come to design, how much are we setting ourselves against the competition?” Duarte said. He went on to tell us that question had to be silenced initially. “We put that out of our heads, understand what our design goals are, and aggressively pursue those.” Another reason Duarte isn’t obsessing over iOS is because he feels better mobile design, even from competing companies, lifts all the boats in the harbor and creates better experiences for everyone. “I don’t want to measure us against the competition because there’s so much great work out there. … There’s a lot of terrific options for consumers,” he said. “And I’m thrilled that the industry as a whole is taking design so seriously. They get it. That’s great for designers and great for customers.” In the end, Duarte said, “I’m really proud of what the entire team has accomplished. When I look at the history of Android, we set out to turn a corner with Ice Cream Sandwich. It’s a significant milestone where a new look and feel has been introduced.” Stay tuned later this week for a deep dive into Roboto, Ice Cream Sandwich’s new typeface. Check out DevBeat, VentureBeat’s brand new channel specifically for developers. The channel will break relevant news and provide insightful commentary aimed to assist developers. DevBeat is sponsored by the Intel AppUp developer program. VentureBeat's mission is to be a digital town square for technical decision-makers to gain knowledge about transformative enterprise technology and transact. Discover our Briefings. Ice Cream Sandwich is the dessert-themed Android codename for version of the open source Android mobile operating system. Ice Cream made its debut in October 2011 as Google s everywhere operating system for smartphones, tablets and other mobile devices. With Ice Cream Sandwich Google worked to unify the forks of Android development while also adapting the Android framework and adding new APIs to help put an end to the issue of Android fragmentation. Ice Cream Sandwich also brought many of the tablet-centric features in Honeycomb Android to smartphones, including video chat support based on Google Talk protocols, a new System Bar for global status and notifications and an Action Bar for application control, tabbed Web browsing support, an optimized soft keyboard and a new email interface. Ice Cream follows a number of earlier updates for Android, including Cupcake Donut Eclair FroYo Gingerbread and Honeycomb The successor to Ice Cream Sandwich, Jelly Bean is expected to become available in late 2012. See also Android platform, Android SDK and Android codenames. A nova versão do sistema operacional Android foi anunciada pela Google na madrugada do dia 19 de outubro. Chamada de Ice Cream Sandwich – seguindo a tradição de nomes de doces –, a versão unifica tablets e primeira aparição do SO foi feita mais tarde, no lançamento do Samsung Galaxy Nexus, aparelho desenvolvido pela empresa coreana em parceria com a Google. Com um design ainda mais elegante, o Ice Cream Sandwich possui muitas características que devem agradar aos usuários mais exigentes, com mudanças e melhorias as principais novidades do Android para tablets e smartphonesNotificações mais elegantes e com mais informaçõesAs notificações podem ser acessadas sem desbloquear a telaWidgets aparecem em uma aba do menu de aplicativosModelo de aplicativos abertos semelhante ao HoneycombReconhecimento facial para desbloqueio do aparelhoÉ possível configurar o dock, inserindo itens para fácil acessoGoogle+ com Messenger e HangoutsEdição de imagens com efeitos e filtros em tempo realFotos panorâmicas com o movimento do aparelhoNova galeria de imagensGerenciador de dados nativoAndroid Beam compartilha arquivos e dados com um aparelho próximoBusca offline no GmailScreenshot da tela ao segurar o botão de ligar e volumeNavegação na internet com até 16 abas abertasFunção Speech-to-text aprimorada, decodifica palavras em tempo realAgenda de contatos com novo visualRoboto mais bonito e funcionalA primeira vista, podemos notar que o design do novo Android é mais limpo e elegante. Tudo isso está baseado em uma nova fonte, desenvolvida pela Google, chamada de Roboto. Ela foi a base da nova interface – uma mudança que começou no desenvolvimento do Android Honeycomb. Notificações e melhorias nos apps nativosAs notificações do sistema operacional acompanham essa filosofia, tornando-se mais bonitas e completas. O mesmo vale para os aplicativos nativos do Android, todos melhorados visual e fucnionalmente Gmail, Google Calendar, YouTube, entre Gmail sempre recebe um novo visual no lançamento de uma versão do Android, e desta vez não foi diferente. O aplicativo está mais bonito, limpo e com prévia do texto das imagens. Além disso, é possível navegar entre uma mensagem e outra deslizando os dedos para os lados. Na parte inferior da tela é você tem os botões de ação que antes só apareciam com um clique no menu. Para acesso offline, o app disponibiliza mensagens dos últimos 30 dias. O Ice Cream Sandwich também pretende alavancar a utilização do Google+, aumentando a interação com a rede social e oferecendo acesso ao mensageiro do app e aos Hangouts. Tudo isso com o envio de imagens em alta resolução para compartilhar com seus facialUma das características mais interessantes é o reconhecimento facial para desbloqueio do aparelho, uma forma de impedir que seu Android seja acessado sem a sua permissão. Rapidamente, a função reconhece sua imagem a partir de uma fotografia, desbloqueando a tela na mesma hora. Widgets de fácil acessoVisualizar quais aplicativos possuem widgets ficou ainda mais fácil. No menu de aplicativos, uma aba é destinada exclusivamente aos widgets, para que você possa acessá-los e inserir o que desejar na homescreen do de dadosA Google também acertou em cheio ao inserir um gerenciador de dados completo no sistema operacional, evitando que os usuário busquem apps de terceiros para instalar em seus aparelhos. Dessa forma, você pode controlar quanto gasta com internet e bloquear o uso após atingir o limite de sua cota. Android BeamO Android Beam é outro recuso interessante. Ele utiliza a função Near field communication NFC para compartilhar informações, links, vídeos, arquivos e contatos com outros aparelhos Android que estejam por Beam no Galaxy Nexus Fonte da imagem SamsungCâmera digitalO aplicativo para câmera digital do Android demonstrou melhorias importantes na apresentação do SO com o Samsung Galaxy Nexus. O tempo para abrir o app e fotografar diminuiu bastante, e um atalho para a câmera foi inserido na lock lag do disparador também diminuiu e você pode fotografar continuamente sem se incomodar com o tempo de carregamento entre uma imagem e outra. A principal característica é o modo panorâmico. Não é necessário fazer montagens, basta movimentar o aparelho da esquerda para a direita e aguardar que ele mesmo realize o processamento da modo de vídeo também recebeu atualizações. Agora é possível fazer vídeos com foco contínuo e acessar o zoom durante a filmagem. Outra função inteligente é a possibilidade de capturar snapshots enquanto grava o galeria de imagens também melhorou, com um visual que lembra a interface do Windows Phone 7 e prioriza o compartilhamento de imagens. Se desejar, pode editar suas imagens através do Android, inserindo filtros que se popularizaram com o de tarefasOs usuários do Android Honeycomb podem contar com um atalho para os aplicativos que estão abertos momento. Ao clicar no botão correspondente, os últimos cinco apps aparecem na tela, com uma imagem da última ação executada, para que você possa navegar entre mesma função aparece no Ice Cream Sandwich de forma renovada, funcionando também como um gerenciador de tarefas. Ele é capaz de finalizar os aplicativos que você não vai mais usar, deslizando a imagem para o na internetO novo navegador do Android, com o mesmo visual da versão Honeycomb, permite que você utilize até 16 abas ao mesmo tempo. Além disso, ele apresenta sincronização com os favoritos do Google Chrome e possui uma opção para leitura de artigos e páginas offline. Aparelhos sem botõesA exemplo do que vimos no Motorola Xoom, com o Android Honeycomb, o Ice Cream Sandwich foi desenvolvido para aparelhos sem botões físicos. Tudo que você precisa está na barra na parte inferior da tela. Dessa forma, sobre ainda mais espaço no display para aplicativos exibidos em tela em breveO kit de desenvolvimento do novo Android já está disponível, para que desenvolvedores possam criar novos aplicativos utilizando todo o potência do Ice Cream Sandwich. Por ora, apenas a Samsung possui o SO, em seu Samsung Galaxy Galaxy Nexus Fonte da imagem SamsungOutras empresas já lançaram comunicados sobre o novo SO, como a HTC. Uma das grandes parceiras da Google na difusão do Android, a fabricante anunciou que já está analisando as novas características do SO para lançar uma atualização completa e satisfatória, priorizando o melhor desempenho e usabilidade dos seus aparelhos com Ice Cream Rubin, executivo da Google, já afirmou que a atualização do SO para outros aparelhos deve chegar "algumas semanas depois" que o Galaxy Nexus chegar ao mercado. Ou seja, sendo bem otimistas, é possível ter o Ice Cream Sandwich nos aparelhos no final de dezembro deste ano. De acordo com a Google, usuários que rodam o sistema do Android podem receber a atualização para o sem maiores você quiser, pode acompanhar todas as novidades do lançamento do Android Ice Cream Sandwich assistindo ao vídeo completo, disponibilizado pelos desenvolvedores do sistema operacional Welcome to Android Android delivers a refined, unified UI for phones and tablets and introduces innovative features for users and developers. This document provides a glimpse of the many new features and technologies that make Android simple, beautiful, and beyond smart. Android for Users Android for Developers Android for Users Simple, beautiful, beyond smart Android builds on the things people love most about Android — easy multitasking, rich notifications, customizable home screens, resizable widgets, and deep interactivity — and adds powerful new ways of communicating and sharing. Refined, evolved UI Focused on bringing the power of Android to the surface, Android makes common actions more visible and lets users navigate with simple, intuitive gestures. Refined animations and feedback throughout the system make interactions engaging and interesting. An entirely new typeface optimized for high-resolution screens improves readability and brings a polished, modern feel to the user interface. Virtual buttons in the System Bar let users navigate instantly to Back, Home, and Recent Apps. The System Bar and virtual buttons are present across all apps, but can be dimmed by applications for full-screen viewing. Users can access each application's contextual options in the Action Bar, displayed at the top and sometimes also at the bottom of the screen. Multitasking is a key strength of Android and it's made even easier and more visual on Android The Recent Apps button lets users jump instantly from one task to another using the list in the System Bar. The list pops up to show thumbnail images of apps used recently — tapping a thumbnail switches to the app. The Recent Apps list makes multitasking simple. Jump to the camera or see notifications without unlocking. For incoming calls, you can respond instantly by text. Rich and interactive notifications let users keep in constant touch with incoming messages, play music tracks, see real-time updates from apps, and much more. On smaller-screen devices, notifications appear at the top of the screen, while on larger-screen devices they appear in the System Bar. The All Apps launcher left and resizable widgets right give you apps and rich content from the home screen. Home screen folders and favorites tray New home screen folders offer a new way for users to group their apps and shortcuts logically, just by dragging one onto another. Also, in All Apps launcher, users can now simply drag an app to get information about it or immediately uninstall it, or disable a pre-installed app. On smaller-screen devices, the home screen now includes a customizable favorites tray visible from all home screens. Users can drag apps, shortcuts, folders, and other priority items in or out of the favorites tray for instant access from any home screen. Resizable widgets Home screens in Android are designed to be content-rich and customizable. Users can do much more than add shortcuts — they can embed live application content directly through interactive widgets. Widgets let users check email, flip through a calendar, play music, check social streams, and more — right from the home screen, without having to launch apps. Widgets are resizable, so users can expand them to show more content or shrink them to save space. New lock screen actions The lock screens now let users do more without unlocking. From the slide lock screen, users can jump directly to the camera for a picture or pull down the notifications window to check for messages. When listening to music, users can even manage music tracks and see album art. Quick responses for incoming calls When an incoming call arrives, users can now quickly respond by text message, without needing to pick up the call or unlock the device. On the incoming call screen, users simply slide a control to see a list of text responses and then tap to send and end the call. Users can add their own responses and manage the list from the Settings app. Swipe to dismiss notifications, tasks, and browser tabs Android makes managing notifications, recent apps, and browser tabs even easier. Users can now dismiss individual notifications, apps from the Recent Apps list, and browser tabs with a simple swipe of a finger. A spell-checker lets you find errors and fix them faster. A powerful voice input engine lets you dictate continously. Improved text input and spell-checking The soft keyboard in Android makes text input even faster and more accurate. Error correction and word suggestion are improved through a new set of default dictionaries and more accurate heuristics for handling cases such as double-typed characters, skipped letters, and omitted spaces. Word suggestion is also improved and the suggestion strip is simplified to show only three words at a time. To fix misspelled words more easily, Android adds a spell-checker that locates and underlines errors and suggests replacement words. With one tap, users can choose from multiple spelling suggestions, delete a word, or add it to the dictionary. Users can even tap to see replacement suggestions for words that are spelled correctly. For specialized features or additional languages, users can now download and install third-party dictionaries, spell-checkers, and other text services. Powerful voice input engine Android introduces a powerful new voice input engine that offers a continuous "open microphone" experience and streaming voice recognition. The new voice input engine lets users dictate the text they want, for as long as they want, using the language they want. Users can speak continously for a prolonged time, even pausing for intervals if needed, and dictate punctuation to create correct sentences. As the voice input engine enters text, it underlines possible dictation errors in gray. After dictating, users can tap the underlined words to quickly replace them from a list of suggestions. Data usage controls let you monitor total usage by network type and application and then set limits if needed. Control over network data Mobile devices can make extensive use of network data for streaming content, synchronizing data, downloading apps, and more. To meet the needs of users with tiered or metered data plans, Android adds new controls for managing network data usage. In the Settings app, colorful charts show the total data usage on each network type mobile or Wi-Fi, as well as amount of data used by each running application. Based on their data plans, users can optionally set warning levels or hard limits on data usage or disable mobile data altogether. Users can also manage the background data used by individual applications as needed. Designed for accessibility A variety of new features greatly enhance the accessibility of Android for users who are blind or have visual impairments. Most important is a new explore-by-touch mode that lets users navigate without having to see the screen. Touching the screen once triggers audible feedback that identifies the UI component below; a second touch in the same component activates it with a full touch event. The new mode is especially important to support users on new devices that use virtual buttons in the System Bar, rather than dedicated hardware buttons or trackballs. Also, standard apps are updated to offer an improved accessibility experience. The Browser supports a script-based screen reader for reading favorite web content and navigating sites. For improved readability, users can also increase the default font size used across the system. The accessibility experience begins at first setup — a simple touch gesture during setup clockwise square from upper left activates all accessibility features and loads a setup tutorial. Once accessibility features are active, everything visible on the screen can be spoken aloud by the standard screen reader. Communication and sharing Contacts and profiles are integrated across apps and social networks, for a consistent, personal experience everywhere — from incoming calls to emails. Designed for the way people live, Android integrates rich social communication and sharing touchpoints across the system, making it easy to talk, email, text, and share. People and profiles Throughout the system, a user’s social groups, profiles, and contacts are linked together and integrated for easy accessibility. At the center is a new People app that offers richer profile information, including a large profile picture, phone numbers, addresses and accounts, status updates, events, stream items, and a new button for connecting on integrated social networks. The user's own contact information is stored in a new "Me" profile, allowing easier sharing with apps and people. All of the user's integrated contacts are displayed in an easy to manage list, including controls over which contacts are shown from any integrated account or social network. Wherever the user navigates across the system, tapping a profile photo displays Quick Contacts, with large profile pictures, shortcuts to phone numbers, text messaging, and more. Unified calendar, visual voicemail To help organize appointments and events, an updated Calendar app brings together personal, work, school, and social agendas. With user permission, other applications can contribute events to the calendar and manage reminders, for an integrated view across multiple calendar providers. The app is redesigned to let users manage events more easily. Calendars are color-coded and users can swipe left or right to change dates and pinch to zoom in or out agendas. In the phone app, a new visual voicemail features integrates incoming messages, voice transcriptions, and audio files from one or more providers. Third-party applications can integrate with the Phone app to add their own voice messages, transcriptions, and more to the visual voicemail inbox. Capture the picture you want, edit, and share instantly. Rich and versatile camera capabilities The Camera app includes many new features that let users capture special moments with great photos and videos. After capturing images, they can edit and share them easily with friends. When taking pictures, continuous focus, zero shutter lag exposure, and decreased shot-to-shot speed help capture clear, precise images. Stabilized image zoom lets users compose photos and video in the way they want, including while video is recording. For new flexibility and convenience while shooting video, users can now take snapshots at full video resolution just by tapping the screen as video continues to record. To make it easier to take great pictures of people, built-in face detection locates faces in the frame and automatically sets focus. For more control, users can tap to focus anywhere in the preview image. For capturing larger scenes, the Camera introduces a single-motion panorama mode. In this mode, the user starts an exposure and then slowly turns the Camera to encompass as wide a perspective as needed. The Camera assembles the full range of continuous imagery into a single panoramic photo. After taking a picture or video, users can quickly share it by email, text message, bluetooth, social networks, and more, just by tapping the thumbnail in the camera controls. A Photo Gallery widget on the home screen. Redesigned Gallery app with photo editor The Gallery app now makes it easier to manage, show, and share photos and videos. For managing collections, a redesigned album layout shows many more albums and offers larger thumbnails. There are many ways to sort albums, including by time, location, people, and tags. To help pictures look their best, the Gallery now includes a powerful photo editor. Users can crop and rotate pictures, set levels, remove red eyes, add effects, and much more. After retouching, users can select one or multiple pictures or videos to share instantly over email, text messaging, bluetooth, social networks, or other apps. An improved Picture Gallery widget lets users look at pictures directly on their home screen. The widget can display pictures from a selected album, shuffle pictures from all albums, or show a single image. After adding the widget to the home screen, users can flick through the photo stacks to locate the image they want, then tap to load it in Gallery. Live Effects let you change backgrounds and use Silly Faces during video. Live Effects for transforming video Live Effects is a collection of graphical transformations that add interest and fun to videos captured in the Camera app. For example, users can change the background behind them to any stock or custom image, for just the right setting when shooting video. Also available for video is Silly Faces, a set of morphing effects that use state-of-the-art face recognition and GPU filters to transform facial features. For example, you can use effects such as small eyes, big mouth, big nose, face squeeze, and more. Outside of the Camera app, Live Effects is available during video chat in the Google Talk app. Snapping a screenshot. Sharing with screenshots Users can now share what's on their screens more easily by taking screenshots. Hardware buttons let them snap a screenshot and store it locally. Afterward, they can view, edit, and share the screen shot in Gallery or a similar app. Cloud-connected experience The Browser tabs menu left lets you quickly switch browser tabs. The options menu right gives you new ways to manage your browsing experience. Benchmark comparisons of Android Browser. Android has always been cloud-connected, letting users browse the web and sync photos, apps, games, email, and contacts — wherever they are and across all of their devices. Android adds new browsing and email capabilities to let users take even more with them and keep communication organized. Powerful web browsing The Android Browser offers an experience that’s as rich and convenient as a desktop browser. It lets users instantly sync and manage Google Chrome bookmarks from all of their accounts, jump to their favorite content faster, and even save it for reading later in case there's no network available. To get the most out of web content, users can now request full desktop versions of web sites, rather than their mobile versions. Users can set their preference for web sites separately for each browser tab. For longer content, users can save a copy for offline reading. To find and open saved pages, users can browse a visual list that’s included with browser bookmarks and history. For better readability and accessibility, users can increase the browser’s zoom levels and override the system default text sizes. Across all types of content, the Android Browser offers dramatically improved page rendering performance through updated versions of the WebKit core and the V8 Crankshaft compilation engine for JavaScript. In benchmarks run on a Nexus S device, the Android browser showed an improvement of nearly 220% over the Android browser in the V8 Benchmark Suite and more than 35% in the SunSpider JavaScript Benchmark. When run on a Galaxy Nexus device, the Android browser showed improvement of nearly 550% in the V8 benchmark and nearly 70% in the SunSpider benchmark. Improved email In Android email is easier to send, read, and manage. For composing email, improved auto-completion of recipients helps with finding and adding frequent contacts more quickly. For easier input of frequent text, users can now create quick responses and store them in the app, then enter them from a convenient menu when composing. When replying to a message, users can now toggle the message to Reply All and Forward without changing screens. For easier browsing across accounts and labels, the app adds an integrated menu of accounts and recent labels. To help users locate and organize IMAP and Exchange email, the Email app now supports nested mail subfolders, each with synchronization rules. Users can also search across folders on the server, for faster results. For enterprises, the Email app supports EAS v14. It supports EAS certificate authentication, provides ABQ strings for device type and mode, and allows automatic sync to be disabled while roaming. Administrators can also limit attachment size or disable attachments. For keeping track of incoming email more easily, a resizable Email widget lets users flick through recent email right from the home screen, then jump into the Email app to compose or reply. Android Beam lets users share what they are using with a single tap. Innovation Android is continously driving innovation forward, pushing the boundaries of communication and sharing with new capabilities and interactions. Android Beam for NFC-based sharing Android Beam is an innovative, convenient feature for sharing across two NFC-enabled devices, It lets people instantly exchange favorite apps, contacts, music, videos — almost anything. It’s incredibly simple and convenient to use — there’s no menu to open, application to launch, or pairing needed. Just touch one Android-powered phone to another, then tap to send. For sharing apps, Android Beam pushes a link to the app's details page in Google Play. On the other device, the Google Play client app launches and loads the details page, for easy downloading of the app. Individual apps can build on Android Beam to add other types of interactions, such as passing game scores, initiating a multiplayer game or chat, and more. Face recognition lets you unlock your phone with your face. Face Unlock Android introduces a completely new approach to securing a device, making each person's device even more personal — Face Unlock is a new screen-lock option that lets users unlock their devices with their faces. It takes advantage of the device front-facing camera and state-of-the-art facial recognition technology to register a face during setup and then to recognize it again when unlocking the device. Users just hold their devices in front of their faces to unlock, or use a backup PIN or pattern. Wi-Fi P2P and Bluetooth HDP Support for Wi-Fi peer-to-peer P2P lets users connect directly to nearby peer devices over Wi-Fi, for more reliable, higher-speed communication in compliance with the Wi-Fi Alliance's Wi-Fi Direct™ certification program. No internet connection or tethering is needed. Through third-party apps, users can connect to compatible devices to take advantage of new features such as instant sharing of files, photos, or other media; streaming video or audio from another device; or connecting to compatible printers or other devices. Android also introduces built-in support for connecting to Bluetooth Health Device Profile HDP devices. With support from third-party apps, users can connect to wireless medical devices and sensors in hospitals, fitness centers, homes, and elsewhere. New Developer Features Unified UI framework for phones, tablets, and more Android brings a unified UI framework that lets developers create elegant, innovative apps for phones, tablets, and more. It includes all of the familiar Android interface elements and APIs — fragments, content loaders, Action Bar, rich notifications, resizable home screen widgets, and more — as well as new elements and APIs. For developers, the unified UI framework in Android means new UI tools, consistent design practices, simplified code and resources, and streamlined development across the range of Android-powered devices. Key Honeycomb developer features, now for phones too Core UI Fragments and content loaders Resizeable home screen widgets Rich notifications Multi-selection, drag-drop, clipboard Improved screen-support API Hardware-accelerated 2D graphics Graphics and animation Property-based animation Renderscript 3D graphics Media and connectivity HTTP Live streaming Bluetooth A2DP and HSP devices Support for RTP MTP/PTP file transfer DRM framework Input from keyboard, mouse, gamepad, joystick Enterprise Full device encryption DPM policies for encrypted storage and passwords Communication and sharing Android extends social and sharing features to any application on the device. Applications can integrate contacts, profile data, stream items, and calendar events from any of the user’s activities or social networks. Social API A shared social provider and API provide a new unified store for contacts, profile data, stream items, and photos. Any app or social network with user permission can contribute raw contacts and make them accessible to other apps and networks. Applications with user permission can also read profile data from the provider and display it in their applications. The social API lets applications store standard contact data as well as new types of content for any given contact, including large profile photos, stream items, and recent activity feedback. Recent activity feedback is a standard way for applications to “tag” a contact with common activity, such as when the user calls the contact or sends an email or SMS message. The social provider uses the recent activity feedback as a new signal in ranking, such as for name auto-complete, to keep the most relevant contacts ranked closest to the top. Applications can also let users set up a social connection to a contact from the People app. When the user touches Add Connection in a contact, the app sends a public intent that other apps can handle, displaying any UI needed to create the social connection. Building on the social API, developers can add powerful new interactions that span multiple social networks and contacts sources. Calendar API A shared calendar content provider and framework API make it easier for developers to add calendar services to their apps. With user permission, any application can add events to the shared database and manage dates, attendees, alerts, and reminders. Applications can also read entries from the database, including events contributed by other applications, and handle the display of event alerts and reminders. Using the calendar provider, applications can take advantage of event data sourced from a variety of apps and protocols, to offer innovative ways of viewing and managing a user’s events. Apps can also use calendar data to improve the relevance of their other content. For lighter-weight access to calendar services, the Calendar app defines a set of public Intents for creating, viewing, and editing events. Rather than needing to implement a calendar UI and integrate directly with the calendar provider, applications can simply broadcast calendar Intents. When the Calendar app receives the Intents, it launches the appropriate UI and stores any event data entered. Using calendar Intents, for example, apps can let users add events directly from lists, dialogs, or home screen widgets, such as for making restaurant reservations or booking time with friends. Visual voicemail API A shared Voicemail provider and API allow developers to build applications that contribute to a unified voicemail store. Voicemails are displayed and played in the call log tab of the platform’s Phone app. Android Beam Android Beam is an NFC-based feature that lets users instantly share information about the apps they are using, just by touching two NFC-enabled phones together. When the devices are in range — within a few centimeters — the system sets up an NFC connection and displays a sharing UI. To share whatever they are viewing with the other device, users just touch the screen. For developers, Android Beam is a new way of triggering almost any type of proximity-based interaction. For example, it can let users instantly exchange contacts, set up multiplayer gaming, join a chat or video call, share a photo or video, and more. The system provides the low-level NFC support and the sharing UI, while the foreground app provides lightweight data to transfer to the other device. Developers have complete control over the data that is shared and how it is handled, so almost any interaction is possible. For larger payloads, developers can even use Android Beam to initiate a connection and transfer the data over Bluetooth, without the need for user-visible pairing. Even if developers do not add custom interactions based on Android Beam they can still benefit from it being deeply integrated into Android. By default the system shares the app’s Google Play URL, so it’s easy for the user to download or purchase the app right away. Modular sharing widget The UI framework includes a new widget, ShareActionProvider, that lets developers quickly embed standard share functionality and UI in the Action Bar of their applications. Developers simply add ShareActionProvider to the menu and set an intent that describes the desired sharing action. The system handles the rest, building up the list of applications that can handle the share intent and dispatching the intent when the user chooses from the menu. New media capabilities Low-level streaming multimedia Android provides a direct, efficient path for low-level streaming multimedia. The new path is ideal for applications that need to maintain complete control over media data before passing it to the platform for presentation. For example, media applications can now retrieve data from any source, apply proprietary encryption/decryption, and then send the data to the platform for display. Applications can now send processed data to the platform as a multiplexed stream of audio/video content in MPEG-2 transport stream format. The platform de-muxes, decodes, and renders the content. The audio track is rendered to the active audio device, while the video track is rendered to either a Surface or a SurfaceTexture. When rendering to a SurfaceTexture, the application can apply subsequent graphics effects to each frame using OpenGL. To support this low-level streaming, the platform introduces a new native API based on Khronos OpenMAX AL The API is implemented on the same underlying services as the platform’s existing OpenSL ES API, so developers can make use of both APIs together if needed. Tools support for low-level streaming multimedia will be available in an upcoming release of the Android NDK. New camera capabilities Developers can take advantage of a variety of new camera features in Android ZSL exposure, continuous focus, and image zoom let apps capture better still and video images, including during video capture. Apps can even capture full-resolution snapshots while shooting video. Apps can now set custom metering regions in a camera preview, then manage white balance and exposure dynamically for those regions. For easier focusing and image processing, a face-detection service identifies and tracks faces in a preview and returns their screen coordinates. Media effects for transforming images and video A set of high-performance transformation filters let developers apply rich effects to any image passed as an OpenGL ES texture. Developers can adjust color levels and brightness, change backgrounds, sharpen, crop, rotate, add lens distortion, and apply other effects. The transformations are processed by the GPU, so they are fast enough for processing image frames loaded from disk, camera, or video stream. Audio remote controls Android adds a new audio remote control API that lets media applications integrate with playback controls that are displayed in a remote view. Media applications can integrate with a remote music playback control that’s built into in the platform’s lock screen, allowing users to control song selection and playback without having to unlock and navigate to the music app. Using the audio remote control API, any music or media app can register to receive media button events from the remote control and then manage play state accordingly. The application can also supply metadata to the remote control, such as album art or image, play state, track number and description, duration, genre, and more. New media codecs and containers Android adds support for additional media types and containers to give developers access to the formats they need. For high-quality compressed images, the media framework adds support for WebP content. For video, the framework now supports streaming VP8 content. For streaming multimedia, the framework supports HTTP Live streaming protocol version 3 and encoding of ADTS-contained AAC content. Additionally, developers can now use Matroska containers for Vorbis and VP8 content. New types of connectivity Wi-Fi P2P Developers can use a framework API to discover and connect directly to nearby devices over a high-performance, secure Wi-Fi peer-to-peer P2P connection. No internet connection or hotspot is needed. Android's Wi-Fi P2P framework complies with the Wi-Fi Alliance's Wi-Fi Direct™ certification program. Wi-Fi peer-to-peer P2P opens new opportunities for developers to add innovative features to their applications. Applications can use Wi-Fi P2P to share files, photos, or other media between devices or between a desktop computer and an Android-powered device. Applications could also use Wi-Fi P2P to stream media content from a peer device such as a digital television or audio player, connect a group of users for gaming, print files, and more. Bluetooth Health Device Profile HDP Developers can now build powerful medical applications that use Bluetooth to communicate with wireless devices and sensors in hospitals, fitness centers, homes, and elsewhere. Applications can collect and manage data from HDP source devices and transmit it to backend medical applications such as records systems, data analysis services, and others. Using a framework API, applications can use Bluetooth to discover nearby devices, establish reliable or streaming data channels, and manage data transmission. Applications can supply any IEEE 11073 Manager to retrieve and interpret health data from Continua-certified devices such as heart-rate monitors, blood meters, thermometers, and scales. New UI components and capabilities Layout enhancements A new layout, GridLayout, improves the performance of Android applications by supporting flatter view hierarchies that are faster to layout and render. Because hierarchies are flatter, developers can also manage alignments between components that are visually related to each other even when they are not logically related, for precise control over application UI. GridLayout is also specifically designed to be configured by drag-and-drop design tools such as Android Studio. OpenGL ES texture views A new TextureView object lets developers directly integrate OpenGL ES textures as rendering targets in a UI hierarchy. The object lets developers display and manipulate OpenGL ES rendering just as they would a normal view object in the hierarchy, including moving, transforming, and animating the view as needed. The TextureView object makes it easy for developers to embed camera preview, decoded video, OpenGL game scenes, and more. TextureView can be viewed as a more powerful version of the existing SurfaceView object, since it offers the same benefits of access to a GL rendering surface, with the added advantage of having that surface participate fully in the normal view hierarchy. Hardware-accelerated 2D drawing All Android-powered devices running Android are required to support hardware-accelerated 2D drawing. Developers can take advantage of this to add great UI effects while maintaining optimal performance on high-resolution screens, even on phones. For example, developers can rely on accelerated scaling, rotation, and other 2D operations, as well as accelerated UI components such as TextureView and compositing modes such as filtering, blending, and opacity. New input types and text services Stylus input, button support, hover events Android includes full support for stylus input events, including tilt and distance axes, pressure, and related motion event properties. To help applications distinguish motion events from different sources, the platform adds distinct tool types for stylus, finger, mouse, and eraser. For improved input from multi-button pointing devices, the platform now provides distinct primary, secondary, and tertiary buttons, as well as back and forward buttons. Hover-enter and hover-exit events are also added, for improved navigation and accessibility. Developers can build on these new input features to add powerful interactions to their apps, such as precise drawing and gesturing, handwriting and shape recognition, improved mouse input, and others. Text services API for integrating spelling checkers Android lets applications query available text services such as dictionaries and spell checkers for word suggestions, corrections, and similar data. The text services are external to the active IME, so developers can create and distribute dictionaries and suggestion engines that plug into the platform. When an application receives results from a text service — for example, word suggestions — it can display them in a dedicated suggestion popup window directly inside the text view, rather than relying on the IME to display them. Enhanced accessibility APIs Android adds new accessibility features and an enhanced API to let developers improve the user experience in their apps, especially on devices that don’t have hardware buttons. For accessibility services such as screen readers in particular, the platform offers new APIs to query window content, for easier navigation, better feedback, and richer user interfaces. Accessibility API To let applications manage interactions more effectively when accessibility features are enabled, the platform adds accessibility events for explore-by-touch mode, scrolling, and text selection. For these and other events, the platform can attach a new object called an accessibility record that provides extra information about the event context. Using the accessibility record and related APIs, applications can now access the view hierarchy associated with an event. Applications can query for key properties such as parent and child nodes, available states, supported actions, screen position, and more. Applications can also request changes to certain properties to help manage focus and selected state. For example, an accessibility service could use these new capabilities to add convenient features such as screen-search by text. Text-to-speech API A new framework API lets developers write text-to-speech engines and make them available to any app requesting TTS capabilities. Efficient network usage In Android users can see how much network data their running apps are using. They can also set limits on data usage by network type and disable background data usage for specific applications. In this context, developers need to design their apps to run efficiently and follow best practices for checking the network connection. Android provides network APIs to let applications meet those goals. As users move between networks or set limits on network data, the platform lets applications query for connection type and availability. Developers can use this information to dynamically manage network requests to ensure the best experience for users. Developers can also build custom network and data-usage options into their apps, then expose them to users directly from Settings by means of a new system Intent. Security for apps and content Secure management of credentials Android makes it easier for applications to manage authentication and secure sessions. A new keychain API and underlying encrypted storage let applications store and retrieve private keys and their corresponding certificate chains. Any application can use the keychain API to install and store user certificates and CAs securely. Address Space Layout Randomization Android now provides address space layout randomization ASLR to help protect system and third party applications from exploitation due to memory-management issues. Enhancements for Enterprise VPN client API Developers can now build or extend their own VPN solutions on the platform using a new VPN API and underlying secure credential storage. With user permission, applications can configure addresses and routing rules, process outgoing and incoming packets, and establish secure tunnels to a remote server. Enterprises can also take advantage of a standard VPN client built into the platform that provides access to L2TP and IPSec protocols. Device policy management for camera The platform adds a new policy control for administrators who manage devices using an installed Device Policy Manager. Administrators can now remotely disable the camera on a managed device for users working in sensitive environments. O Google se esforçou bastante para falar o que é divertido no Ice Cream Sandwich. Ele certamente é avançado, e poderoso, e mais focado no humano do que os Androids anteriores. Mas eu não tenho certeza se eu chamaria isso de divertido. E isso é um problema. Diversão é algo que você faz porque quer. Diversão é mais do que apenas distração, é prazer. É algo que transcende. E eu não tenho certeza se o Google consegue ser divertido. Eles têm um bom entendimento que iria atrair objetivamente um ser humano, da mesma maneira que um Cylon teria. Mas o Ice Cream Sandwich, apesar de poderoso, não é uma experiência divertida. Mesmo com todas as suas funções matadoras, ele não consegue afastar o estilo frio e distante que infelizmente se tornou uma característica do Android. A sem a diversão, você pode acha-lo útil e até mesmo essencial, mas não tenho certeza se você irá amá-lo. Desde a primeira vez que eu usei um G1, o Android sempre me pareceu mais poderoso que o iOS da Apple. O Android sempre teve mais funções impressionantes, vindas direto do futuro. Oh, o iOS 5 pode acionar um alerta quando você chega em um certo local? Que gracinha, mas eu já fazia isso com o Locale no Android em 2008. Processos no background. Notificações. Navegação native. Layers. NFC. Etc. O Android sempre tentou inovar onde era possível. Isso é admirável, mas frequentemente complicava a usabilidade. E então chega o Ice Cream Sandwich. Nós iremos dar uma olhada no próprio Samsung Galaxy Nexus depois. Mas hoje nós queremos dar uma olhada no motor que ele usa. Ice Cream Sandwich é de longe o SO Android mais fácil de usar que eu já testei, em um smartphone ou tablet. É o primeiro que não parece tão digital e robótico que você tem vontade de colocar na orelha para tentar ouvir bipes e zumbidos mecânicos. Ele contém todo aquele poder que você deseja com apps de Android, mas coloca em um pacote humanamente amigável. É rápido e responsivo. Já vem pré-carregado com ótimos apps do Google que você irá usar assim que liga-lo. Você irá querer mergulhar no Ice Cream Sandwich e começar a explorar. E eis o que você irá encontrar. Os pequenos grandes toques Tudo aqui funciona um pouco melhor do que antes. Usar um Samsung Galaxy Nexus com Ice Cream Sandwich lado a lado com o Samsung Galaxy SII rodando Gingerbread foi revelador. Este último pareceu desajeitado, quadrado e cru em comparação. O Galaxy Nexus era mais bonito de se ver e mais fácil de usar. Vamos começar pela aparência. O ícone do telefone, por exemplo. No Gingerbread padrão, é um telefone verde sem graça. Se você olhar com atenção, verá uma sombra perto da parte da orelha e da boca, mas na maior parte ele parece, bem, chapado e sem graça. No ICS, o ícone é um handset sem bordas que flutua e paira. Ele tem um rico sombreamento e diferenciação de cor que sugere profundidade e contorno. Ele parece convidativo. Ele praticamente diz “Me ligue”. Essas sutis melhoras na interface estão em todo lugar. Tudo no ICS é um pouco mais texturizado, mais arredondado, melhor pensado em termos de design. Mesmo sua fonte, uma mistura de Helvética, Myriad e algumas outras, parece mais suave e mais moderna do que a família Droid que a precedeu. É visualmente muito mais atraente do que o Gingerbread jamais foi. Melhor ainda, muita coisa do ICS é mais fácil de gerenciar. Por exemplo, um link permanente para as configurações do sistema que fica na barra de notificações. Então não importa onde você esteja no OS, você está a um swipe e um toque de distancia do controle total. As próprias notificações também melhoraram bastante. Elas ainda chegam para você do topo da tela, mas você pode dispensá-las uma de cada vez ao deslizá-las passa esquerda ou direita. Nas telas de home, um novo ícone persistente na parte de baixo agora leva a todos os seus aplicativos. Ele está em todas as telas de home, pronto para mostrar todos os seus apps. Você também pode adicionar quatro outros apps nessa fileira, para que você tenha acesso fácil para os apps que frequentemente usa, como o seu browser ou e-mail. Os quatro ícones antigos que faziam parte da fileira da home foram completamente repensados. Os ícones de busca e menu sumiram. No lugar está um único ícone de Apps Recentes que permite que você troque entre funções, ou feche apps que estão rodando com um swipe. Também notável Apesar da fileira de home já ter feito parte da borda física, ela agora foi movida para a própria tela, e é feita de softkeys que rotacionam quando você gira o seu aparelho. Apps individuais navegam melhor também. No app Books, por exemplo, as viradas de página mais animadas no ICS podem chamar atenção, mas o que brilha aqui é a maneira que você acessa as opções. Ao invés de apertar um botão na barra, você toca em uma página, e um ícone representando opções aparece no topo da tela, junto com uma caixa de busca. Aperte novamente para uma lista de opções. É simplesmente mais rápido, melhor e mais intuitivo. E ainda tem mais. O ICS é um labirinto de melhorias e detalhes. Mas o principal é que a navegação é muito, muito melhor em dezenas de pequenas, porém importantes maneiras. Todos esses são ajustes pequenos que se juntam para passar menos tempo tentando fazer coisas e mais tempo realmente fazendo-as. Elas significam menos cliques para gerenciar seus apps. Mais próximo de acertar O Ice Cream Sandwich não tem nenhum dos toques esquiomorfos que você irá encontrar no iOS, e até mesmo tirou alguns que existiam no Gingerbread. Apesar de algumas vezes isso ser algo bom, outras vezes é intrigante. Por exemplo, quando você desce até o limite da tela, ao invés de pular, ela brilha em azul. Essa puladinha funciona porque é uma coisa que frequentemente acontece na vida real quando você puxa algo além do ponto que a coisa deveria ir ela estica e volta. O brilho azul é menos notável e menos óbvio na sua função. Estou no limite da página ou acabei de irradiar meus apps? Mas frequentemente a vontade de experimentar visualmente compensa. Por exemplo, quando o Google trocou os Contatos por Pessoas. No Ice Cream Sandwich, os contatos sumiram, pelo menos como um app. No seu lugar tem um app chamado pessoas que puxa vários serviços, como Twitter ou Google Plus, além dos dados puros do caderno de endereços. Ele mostra diretamente atualizações no status e em alguns casos até mesmo fotos em alta resolução. No Gingerbread, o ícone de contatos é um robô. O ícone de Pessoas, por outro lado, não parece com uma pessoa. E ainda assim ele sorri para você. Em outras palavras, ele está mais amigável. E é claro, isso é outro exemplo do Android tentando se tornar mais amigável e mais focado em pessoas. O que era bom ficou ótimo Existem algumas mudanças maiores também, o tipo de reformulação radical que você espera de um grande lançamento. E elas algumas vezes são excelentes, como a mudança no app da câmera para fazer fotos panorâmicas automaticamente. Tudo que você precisa é girar o aparelho e você pode capturar impressionantes paisagens panorâmicas. Eu chamo essa aqui de Abóbora na Praia Enquanto isso, as fotos disparam no que parece ser tempo real. A velocidade do obturador é impressionante. Tocar na tela não apenas foca, mas funciona muito bem. A detecção de rosto também foi quase perfeita. Em suma Você irá usar pra caramba essa câmera. Outra grande renovação que não deve ser subestimada? Digitação. O teclado do Android sempre me fez querer matar alguém. Uma das vantagens do Android que eu sempre ouvi é que você pode customizar radicalmente o teclado com um app como o Swype. Isso é ótimo. Mas o problema é que você basicamente precisa de um teclado third-party no Android. Não mais. O teclado no Ice Cream Sandwich é incrível. É responsivo, preciso, e o texto preditivo funciona muito bem. Eis aqui o mesmo pedaço de texto, digitado tão rápido quanto eu conseguia, usando o teclado padrão no Gingerbread e Ice Cream Sandwich. Ice Cream Sandwich So, I’m just trying to writs something s bit longer here, as quickly as I can withour! Regard for typos or errors. I just want to see how quickly I can use the keyboard, and in fact it seems greatly improved. Gingerbread So, Im just tryibg to write something a bit lobger here as quivkly as i can without revard for tyops or errors. I just want to see how quickky i canbuse ge keyboard and i face it seems greatly imporved. É uma grande melhora, mas ainda não é perfeito. Você está forçando a barra Algumas vezes o Ice Cream Sandwich praticamente implora para você curti-lo. Leve em consideração os efeitos de vídeo embutidos. Eles fazem coisas como aumentar o seu nariz ou diminuir a sua cabeça. Eles são bem legais, da primeira vez que você os encontra porque ele não simplesmente altera um ponto na tela onde o SO acha que seu nariz e boca estarão; ele realmente reconhece as suas características faciais e as distorce mesmo se você mover sua cabeça de um lado para o outro ou para frente e para trás. No guia para os efeitos de vídeo, o Google oferece a seguinte orientação “Nota Isto é divertido.” Obrigado, Google. É bom saber. E tem as funções sociais. O Google apostou alto no Plus. Ele está usando o Ice Cream Sandwich para empurrar o Plus como cerveja em um bar. O Plus está por toda parte. Ele vem com apps para o Plus e o G+ Messenger de fábrica. Suas fotos são automaticamente enviadas para o Google Plus. Opções de compartilhamento, mesmo para a mídia, todas levam para o Plus. Você nem sempre irá querer essa integração com o Google Plus. Muitas pessoas que eu nunca irei querer enviar e-mail, mensagens ou ligar estão listadas no meu app de Pessoas porque elas são contatos do Google Plus. Apesar de você poder selecionar quais círculos quer mostrar, se, assim como eu, você não investiu muito tempo arrumando seus círculos, você acabará com centenas de conhecidos ou simplesmente nenhum. Pior, quando eu tentei enviar um e-mail para a minha esposa, ele enviou um para mim. Por quê? Porque ela nunca tinha completado o profile do Google Plus. E por alguma razão, as informações do Google Plus dela estavam repletas com os meus dados. Não tem como editar isso. Eu eventualmente desliguei a opção de sincronizar meus contatos do Plus porque era irritante demais. Eu admiro a tentativa, entretanto ela não funciona bem. O Android não é simplesmente um robô. É um robô com características humanas. E se tem uma coisa que falta no SO Android do Google, é humanidade. Apesar de extremamente avançado, ele nunca foi uma pessoa. Homem versus máquina O Ice Cream Sandwich é a tentativa do Google de tornar o Android não apenas mais avançado do ponto de vista tecnológico, mas também mais humano. Ele tem vários pequenos traços de humanidade espalhados. Desde o app Pessoas que está na frente por padrão, apara a profunda-porém-equivocada integração social com o Google Plus, até aqueles efeitos de vídeo engraçadinhos. Quer dizer, você destrava o aparelho com o seu rosto. O Ice Cream Sandwich é a tentativa do Google de fazer design para seres humanos. E ele consegue, na maior parte. E é claro, o Ice Cream Sandwich é uma brilhante realização tecnológica. Ele está repleto de funções poderosas, como uma ótima ferramenta de gerenciamento de dados, edição de fotos, e NFC que permite que você faça coisas como compartilhar fotos ou vídeos entre aparelhos simplesmente encostando os dois. Esse foco em tecnologia do futuro pode eventualmente ser um ponto negativo. Um aparelho Android antigo tipicamente parece mais velho do que realmente é. Quando a sua vantagem é a tecnologia, o tempo é sempre o seu maior inimigo. E de muitas formas, ele ainda parece precisar de um pouco mais de acabamento. Ele precisa do polimento do iOS ou do Mango. Passeie por uma lista de álbuns do Rdio no ICS e no iOS 5 lado a lado e é visível o quão mais fluida é a última UI. A versão do iOS se move em uma velocidade mais variável e natural e desliza antes de parar. A versão do Android se move aos trancos e para mais abruptamente. Você pode aliviar isso, forçando a renderização de GPU para apps third party, mas ainda é notável. Os cantos são mais quadrados nos ícones de álbuns no Android, dando uma aparência mais quadrada e menos sofisticada. Mesmo em apps nativos, como o Navegador Web, eu notei que o texto tendia a escorregar pela tela, ao invés de fluir. Mas como um todo, é um update maravilhoso, poderoso e visualmente interessante. É certamente a versão mais amigável para o usuário do Android até agora. É mais fácil de navegar, mais responsiva e uma experiência melhor no geral. Como um usuário de Android de longa data, eu realmente curti. Eu acho até persuasivo. Mas como fui convertido recentemente para o iOS5, eu não sei se é suficiente para me fazer voltar. Eis aqui um exemplo final para ilustrar o que eu quero dizer. O Ice Cream Sandwich torna realmente fácil tirar uma foto e compartilhar com todos os meus contatos e círculos no Google Plus. O iOS torna realmente fácil tirar uma foto e compartilhar com o meu pai em um cartão postal no correio dos Estados Unidos. O correio envolve bem menos tecnologia. Mas de sua própria maneira, é muito mais divertido. Para a maioria das pessoas, a tecnologia ultrapassa os ciclos de atualizações. Em dois anos, o estilo e o flash podem sumir. Mas a diversão persiste. A diversão importa. Competência é uma coisa boa, mas eu prefiro prazer.

kekurangan android ice cream sandwich