Gingerbread also adds the ability to correct a misspelled word by displaying a list of dictionary suggestions over a selected word. The Gingerbread copy-and-paste tool now looks fairly similar to Apple's iOS version. To select a word you press and hold, and you can drag markers over the entire area you want to highlight and copy.
Then you can copy to the clipboard and paste. Support for front-facing camera The built-in camera app will now support a front-facing camera, if the Android device has one.
Internet phone The Gingerbread OS adds a built-in web phone, but it doesn't look straightforward to use. Cleaner UI. Brian recently wrote a book about the always-connected mobile future called Always On published June 7, by Da Capo. Check out Brian's Google Profile. This document provides a glimpse at some of the new features and technologies in Android 2.
For detailed information about the new developer APIs, see the Android 2. The user interface is refined in many ways across the system, making it easier to learn, faster to use, and more power-efficient. A simplified visual theme of colors against black brings vividness and contrast to the notification bar, menus, and other parts of the UI. Changes in menus and settings make it easier for the user to navigate and control the features of the system and device. The Android soft keyboard is redesigned and optimized for faster text input and editing.
The keys themselves are reshaped and repositioned for improved targeting, making them easier to see and press accurately, even at high speeds. The keyboard also displays the current character and dictionary suggestions in a larger, more vivid style that is easier to read. The keyboard adds the capability to correct entered words from suggestions in the dictionary.
As the user selects a word already entered, the keyboard displays suggestions that the user can choose from, to replace the selection. The user can also switch to voice input mode to replace the selection. Smart suggestions let the user accept a suggestion and then return to correct it later, if needed, from the original set of suggestions. From certain keys, users can also access a popup menu of accented characters, numbers, and symbols by holding the key and sliding to select a character.
When entering text or viewing a web page, the user can quickly select a word by press-hold, then copy to the clipboard and paste. Pressing on a word enters a free-selection mode — the user can adjust the selection area as needed by dragging a set of bounding arrows to new positions, then copy the bounded area by pressing anywhere in the selection area.
For text entry, the user can slide-press to enter a cursor mode, then reposition the cursor easily and accurately by dragging the cursor arrow. With both the selection and cursor modes, no use of a trackball is needed. The Android system takes a more active role in managing apps that are keeping the device awake for too long or that are consuming CPU while running in the background.
By managing such apps — closing them if appropriate — the system helps ensure best possible performance and maximum battery life. The system also gives the user more visibility over the power being consumed by system components and running apps.
The Application settings provides an accurate overview of how the battery is being used, with details of the usage and relative power consumed by each component or application. A shortcut to the Manage Applications control now appears in the Options Menu in the Home screen and Launcher, making it much easier to check and manage application activity. Once the user enters Manage Applications, a new Running tab displays a list of active applications and the storage and memory being used by each.
Google launched Android 4. If you're still holding onto a phone running Gingerbread, it's about to get a whole lot harder to use with Google services. Starting September 27 , any device running Android 2. The company specifically highlights Gmail, YouTube, and Maps as apps destined to produce username and password errors following this date. In an email sent to affected users, Google suggests updating your device to Android 3. If you're still using a Gingerbread phone as your daily driver — or even as a secondary device — it might be time to give up the ghost.
As with most of Google's OS restrictions, this is driven primarily by safety and security. While Android phones have gained plenty of new features since , they're also far, far more secure. Monthly security patches have become the norm for a reason, after all.
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