After weeks of leaks, other leaks, and false starts, Google finally unveiled Android
4.3 at this morning's breakfast event with Android and Chrome head Sundar
Pichai.
Still dubbed Jelly Bean, this update follows in the footsteps of
versions 4.1 and 4.2: it introduces a couple of major features and a handful of
smaller ones without drastically altering the Android experience introduced
back in version 4.0.
Heading the charge is official support for
Bluetooth Low Energy, part of the now-supported Bluetooth 4.0 specification.
Android OEMs have long been able to add Bluetooth 4.0 support to their own
Android builds for their phones, but this is the first time that support has
been incorporated into the core of Android. This means Nexus devices that
receive the Android 4.3 update and have capable hardware will finally be able
to support Bluetooth 4.0, and OEMs using Android will have to do less work to
offer the feature in their own devices.
The new operating system will also feature
multi-user restricted profiles. This will let users control access to contents
and apps per user—so parents, for example, can control which applications their
kids can access. When accessed from restricted profiles, applications behave
differently. On stage, Hugo Barra demonstrated this by showing a puzzle game
whose in-app purchase functionality was automatically disabled when it was
accessed on the kids' restricted profile.
Additionally, the new operating system
supports the OpenGL ES 3.0 extensions, up from the
previous OpenGL ES 2.0. Barra mentioned that Android would be the first mobile
platform to officially support the new API extensions.
ROM leaks for devices like the Nexus 4 and
Google Play edition S 4 have given us additional insight into minor
improvements like those made to the phone dialer, which can now auto-complete
numbers from your contacts list. There's reportedly a full emoji keyboard, a
must for when your thoughts and feelings are more easily expressed by tiny
pictures than words. Other early reports have also mentioned improved
performance and boosted active and standby battery life, though we'll have to
test this ourselves to be sure.
Android 4.2's camera interface has been
swapped out for a new version, identical to what we've seen in Google Play
edition phones like the Galaxy S 4 and HTC One. Where Android 4.2 arranged its camera
settings in a circle, Android 4.3 arranges them in an arc that you navigate by
dragging your finger through it. Assuming it doesn't make any changes to the
version from the Google Play phones, this new interface is more of a step
sideways than an upgrade from the old one. It doesn't introduce new features or
even make the old ones much easier to find; it simply changes how those items
are presented.
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