
If you want Google’s revamped Photos app to be a complete
surprise, look away now: Android Police has got some authentic-looking screenshots showing
off the new software as well as some details about how it works. We’re
expecting Google to launch
the new product at some point during Google I/O later this week.
As you would expect from Google, search plays a prominent
role in the new apps: Your photos get automatically tagged with their contents,
so you can run a quick search for “dog” or “beach” and get back all the matching
images without having to label them all yourself. Like the current app
integrated into Google+, the new one lets you back up photos at a reduced size
(which doesn’t count against your space quota) or at their original resolutions
(which does).
Pictures are laid out in a clear and tidy grid with Google’s
Material Design in evidence everywhere. Photos can be sorted by day or by month
as usual, and the editing features have been improved as well. Android Police says the
service will get a new place to live on the Web at photos.google.com.

The
various Auto-Awesome features (which create slideshows and movies from your photos
with minimal manual effort) are being shifted into a new tool called Assistant.
It lets you create albums of photos quickly based on the metadata stored with
your files (like date and location) and there seem to be more manual controls included
too.
Photo and videos can be shared from within the app using
customized links — based on the information obtained by Android Police you’ll
be able to strip out location metadata from the shared files to stop other
people from tracking your movements or finding your home address.
All the major players in the tech world are working on better
ways to collect and organize the stacks of photos we’re taking on our
smartphones, but — as the disappearance and reappearance of the
Camera Roll in iOS proves — no one’s quite figured out the best way to
do it yet. We should get a proper look at Google’s next attempt in the next few
days.
No comments:
Post a Comment