These are the seven best fresh features of Android Marshmallow – The Edge
These are the seven best fresh features of Android Marshmallow
You’re going to want Android Marshmallow. Google’s latest version of Android may sound like a single headline feature followed by a list of little improvements, but they all add up to one significant update — there’s a reason Google is calling this release Android 6.0.
Marshmallow is going to make Android able to do a lot more for you, all while making key refinements across the OS that address longstanding issues. All in all, we’re looking at a smarter, sleeker, and more useable Android. So yeah, you’re going to want to update.
Of course, as always, when you can update is going to depend on who made your phone. Nexus devices will be updated almost instantly, but phones from Samsung, Motorola, Sony, LG, and others are going to be on their own timelines, some swift, some slow, some nonexistent. Those phones may also get support for some features and not others, depending on how the device is customized.
Google may be announcing Marshmallow’s official release — coming next week — today, but it actually introduced its fresh features back in May. In case you missed the announcement or have forgotten what happened in the months since, here are the features we’re most excited for in the fresh release of Android.
Google Now on Tap
Google Now on Tap is lightly Marshmallow’s standout feature. It takes Google Now — the predictive assistant that’s been beside your home screen for a duo years — and lets it crawl through your apps so that you can get extra info on basically anything almost instantly.
Google Now will read your screen and tell you about what it sees
Here’s how it works: your press and hold the home button while inwards of any app, and Google Now will read the screen, look for anything interesting — like the name of a celebrity, an event, or a location — and then comeback information on what it sees in a little popup box on the bottom of the screen.
If someone texts you the name of a restaurant, for example, Now on Tap might see its name and present you with its location on a map. Or if you’re on a news story about a celebrity, Now on Tap might pull up their information from Wikipedia or give you the chance to hop to their page in the IMDb app.
It’s an amazingly cool feature, and our initial tests showcased it working fairly well (albeit under a managed environment). This is going to be a big deal in Marshmallow and — more than likely — future versions of Android as well.
Case-by-case app permissions
This sounds insanely boring, but it’s a indeed significant update. To date, Android apps have asked you during their install process for permission to access everything and anything that they might need: things like your camera, location, message history, and so on. Often enough, you’ll see all sorts of things that it seems like an app shouldn’t need access to, but you don’t have the option of telling no to just one item or asking what anything is used for.
Under Marshmallow, this is going to switch. Developers will now be able to ask for permissions on a case-by-case basis. That means when you go to open up the camera in Instagram, for example, Instagram could supply a pop-up asking if you want to let it access your camera. That way you know exactly when an app is using a feature and why it’s using it. It also means you can download and install an app, use most of it, but prevent it from doing one or two things that you disapprove of.
Apps will have to update to the fresh way of doing things before all of this starts to happen. For now, Marshmallow will still let you go into settings to deal with the apps you already have set up. Apple has dealt with permissions on iOS in this manner for a while now, so some people may already be familiar with this treatment. Basically, it’s a good idea, and it’s about time it hit Android.
Fingerprint support
Fingerprint sensors have already popped up here and there on Android phones, but soon, they’re very likely going to be everywhere. That’s because Google is building dedicated support for fingerprint sensors into Android, so that phone makers don’t have to code it all in on their own. That means your next Android phone will likely let you use a fingerprint sensor to unlock your phone, make payments, and log into various apps and services. Basically, it’s going to be a hefty convenience for both the people making Android phones and the people using them.
USB Type-C
Everyone hates buying fresh cables, but this time it’s worth it. USB Type-C (also called USB-C) is a little fresh reversible USB format that’s kind of sweeping the tech industry. Before you know it, it’s going to be used to charge most phones, tablets, and laptops, and for transferring data and movie inbetween devices. Marshmallow adds support for USB Type-C for Android phones and tablets, so there’s a very good chance that your next phone will use it. Get ready — you’ll never stab a Micro USB cable in the wrong direction again.
It seems like every fresh version of every operating system makes a claim about improving battery life, but Google’s latest improvement may actually be a meaningful one. Doze, a fresh feature in Marshmallow, monitors how your device is being used and adjusts app activity accordingly. Basically, if you aren’t using a tablet all day while it lies on your table, Marshmallow will simply pause your apps so they don’t drain through your battery. That means apps won’t be primed with fresh content the 2nd you open them, but Google says a device’s standby time could dual. Not a bad tradeoff.
Better cut, copy, and paste
Another petite but meaningful switch in Marshmallow is the way that it treats copy and pasting text. Rather than making you hop up to the top of the screen to find and decipher the cut, copy, and paste buttons, Marshmallow will float the options directly above the text you’ve selected. It’s pretty much identical to how iOS does it, and it’s a solid switch. Even if it’s only a puny switch, it’s for something that you use a lot.
Chrome works inwards other apps
It’s always frustrating getting kicked out of an app and over to the web where you have to wait for a site to leisurely explosion, so Google is doing something about it. With a feature called Chrome Custom-built Tabs, Marshmallow will permit apps to preload certain web content before sending you over to an in-app Chrome tab. That idea is that you’re still visiting a live-updating website, but the practice should be much smoother.
Edge Movie: Hands-on with the Nexus 5X
These are the seven best fresh features of Android Marshmallow – The Brink
These are the seven best fresh features of Android Marshmallow
You’re going to want Android Marshmallow. Google’s latest version of Android may sound like a single headline feature followed by a list of little improvements, but they all add up to one significant update — there’s a reason Google is calling this release Android 6.0.
Marshmallow is going to make Android able to do a lot more for you, all while making key refinements across the OS that address longstanding issues. All in all, we’re looking at a smarter, sleeker, and more useable Android. So yeah, you’re going to want to update.
Of course, as always, when you can update is going to depend on who made your phone. Nexus devices will be updated almost instantly, but phones from Samsung, Motorola, Sony, LG, and others are going to be on their own timelines, some prompt, some slow, some nonexistent. Those phones may also get support for some features and not others, depending on how the device is customized.
Google may be announcing Marshmallow’s official release — coming next week — today, but it actually introduced its fresh features back in May. In case you missed the announcement or have forgotten what happened in the months since, here are the features we’re most excited for in the fresh release of Android.
Google Now on Tap
Google Now on Tap is lightly Marshmallow’s standout feature. It takes Google Now — the predictive assistant that’s been beside your home screen for a duo years — and lets it crawl through your apps so that you can get extra info on basically anything almost instantly.
Google Now will read your screen and tell you about what it sees
Here’s how it works: your press and hold the home button while inwards of any app, and Google Now will read the screen, look for anything interesting — like the name of a celebrity, an event, or a location — and then come back information on what it sees in a little popup box on the bottom of the screen.
If someone texts you the name of a restaurant, for example, Now on Tap might see its name and present you with its location on a map. Or if you’re on a news story about a celebrity, Now on Tap might pull up their information from Wikipedia or give you the chance to hop to their page in the IMDb app.
It’s an exceptionally cool feature, and our initial tests showcased it working fairly well (albeit under a managed environment). This is going to be a big deal in Marshmallow and — more than likely — future versions of Android as well.
Case-by-case app permissions
This sounds insanely boring, but it’s a truly significant update. To date, Android apps have asked you during their install process for permission to access everything and anything that they might need: things like your camera, location, message history, and so on. Often enough, you’ll see all sorts of things that it seems like an app shouldn’t need access to, but you don’t have the option of telling no to just one item or asking what anything is used for.
Under Marshmallow, this is going to switch. Developers will now be able to ask for permissions on a case-by-case basis. That means when you go to open up the camera in Instagram, for example, Instagram could supply a pop-up asking if you want to let it access your camera. That way you know exactly when an app is using a feature and why it’s using it. It also means you can download and install an app, use most of it, but prevent it from doing one or two things that you disapprove of.
Apps will have to update to the fresh way of doing things before all of this starts to happen. For now, Marshmallow will still let you go into settings to deal with the apps you already have set up. Apple has dealt with permissions on iOS in this manner for a while now, so some people may already be familiar with this treatment. Basically, it’s a good idea, and it’s about time it hit Android.
Fingerprint support
Fingerprint sensors have already popped up here and there on Android phones, but soon, they’re most likely going to be everywhere. That’s because Google is building dedicated support for fingerprint sensors into Android, so that phone makers don’t have to code it all in on their own. That means your next Android phone will likely let you use a fingerprint sensor to unlock your phone, make payments, and log into various apps and services. Basically, it’s going to be a thick convenience for both the people making Android phones and the people using them.
USB Type-C
Everyone hates buying fresh cables, but this time it’s worth it. USB Type-C (also called USB-C) is a little fresh reversible USB format that’s kind of sweeping the tech industry. Before you know it, it’s going to be used to charge most phones, tablets, and laptops, and for transferring data and movie inbetween devices. Marshmallow adds support for USB Type-C for Android phones and tablets, so there’s a very good chance that your next phone will use it. Get ready — you’ll never stab a Micro USB cable in the wrong direction again.
It seems like every fresh version of every operating system makes a claim about improving battery life, but Google’s latest improvement may actually be a meaningful one. Doze, a fresh feature in Marshmallow, monitors how your device is being used and adjusts app activity accordingly. Basically, if you aren’t using a tablet all day while it lies on your table, Marshmallow will simply pause your apps so they don’t drain through your battery. That means apps won’t be primed with fresh content the 2nd you open them, but Google says a device’s standby time could dual. Not a bad tradeoff.
Better cut, copy, and paste
Another puny but meaningful switch in Marshmallow is the way that it treats copy and pasting text. Rather than making you hop up to the top of the screen to find and decipher the cut, copy, and paste buttons, Marshmallow will float the options directly above the text you’ve selected. It’s pretty much identical to how iOS does it, and it’s a solid switch. Even if it’s only a puny switch, it’s for something that you use a lot.
Chrome works inwards other apps
It’s always frustrating getting kicked out of an app and over to the web where you have to wait for a site to leisurely geyser, so Google is doing something about it. With a feature called Chrome Custom-made Tabs, Marshmallow will permit apps to preload certain web content before sending you over to an in-app Chrome tab. That idea is that you’re still visiting a live-updating website, but the practice should be much smoother.
Edge Movie: Hands-on with the Nexus 5X
These are the seven best fresh features of Android Marshmallow – The Brink
These are the seven best fresh features of Android Marshmallow
You’re going to want Android Marshmallow. Google’s latest version of Android may sound like a single headline feature followed by a list of lil’ improvements, but they all add up to one significant update — there’s a reason Google is calling this release Android 6.0.
Marshmallow is going to make Android able to do a lot more for you, all while making key refinements across the OS that address longstanding issues. All in all, we’re looking at a smarter, sleeker, and more useable Android. So yeah, you’re going to want to update.
Of course, as always, when you can update is going to depend on who made your phone. Nexus devices will be updated almost instantly, but phones from Samsung, Motorola, Sony, LG, and others are going to be on their own timelines, some quick, some slow, some nonexistent. Those phones may also get support for some features and not others, depending on how the device is customized.
Google may be announcing Marshmallow’s official release — coming next week — today, but it actually introduced its fresh features back in May. In case you missed the announcement or have forgotten what happened in the months since, here are the features we’re most excited for in the fresh release of Android.
Google Now on Tap
Google Now on Tap is lightly Marshmallow’s standout feature. It takes Google Now — the predictive assistant that’s been beside your home screen for a duo years — and lets it crawl through your apps so that you can get extra info on basically anything almost instantly.
Google Now will read your screen and tell you about what it sees
Here’s how it works: your press and hold the home button while inwards of any app, and Google Now will read the screen, look for anything interesting — like the name of a celebrity, an event, or a location — and then comeback information on what it sees in a little popup box on the bottom of the screen.
If someone texts you the name of a restaurant, for example, Now on Tap might see its name and present you with its location on a map. Or if you’re on a news story about a celebrity, Now on Tap might pull up their information from Wikipedia or give you the chance to hop to their page in the IMDb app.
It’s an amazingly cool feature, and our initial tests demonstrated it working fairly well (albeit under a managed environment). This is going to be a big deal in Marshmallow and — more than likely — future versions of Android as well.
Case-by-case app permissions
This sounds insanely boring, but it’s a truly significant update. To date, Android apps have asked you during their install process for permission to access everything and anything that they might need: things like your camera, location, message history, and so on. Often enough, you’ll see all sorts of things that it seems like an app shouldn’t need access to, but you don’t have the option of telling no to just one item or asking what anything is used for.
Under Marshmallow, this is going to switch. Developers will now be able to ask for permissions on a case-by-case basis. That means when you go to open up the camera in Instagram, for example, Instagram could supply a pop-up asking if you want to let it access your camera. That way you know exactly when an app is using a feature and why it’s using it. It also means you can download and install an app, use most of it, but prevent it from doing one or two things that you disapprove of.
Apps will have to update to the fresh way of doing things before all of this starts to happen. For now, Marshmallow will still let you go into settings to deal with the apps you already have set up. Apple has dealt with permissions on iOS in this manner for a while now, so some people may already be familiar with this treatment. Basically, it’s a good idea, and it’s about time it hit Android.
Fingerprint support
Fingerprint sensors have already popped up here and there on Android phones, but soon, they’re most likely going to be everywhere. That’s because Google is building dedicated support for fingerprint sensors into Android, so that phone makers don’t have to code it all in on their own. That means your next Android phone will likely let you use a fingerprint sensor to unlock your phone, make payments, and log into various apps and services. Basically, it’s going to be a giant convenience for both the people making Android phones and the people using them.
USB Type-C
Everyone hates buying fresh cables, but this time it’s worth it. USB Type-C (also called USB-C) is a little fresh reversible USB format that’s kind of sweeping the tech industry. Before you know it, it’s going to be used to charge most phones, tablets, and laptops, and for transferring data and movie inbetween devices. Marshmallow adds support for USB Type-C for Android phones and tablets, so there’s a very good chance that your next phone will use it. Get ready — you’ll never stab a Micro USB cable in the wrong direction again.
It seems like every fresh version of every operating system makes a claim about improving battery life, but Google’s latest improvement may actually be a meaningful one. Doze, a fresh feature in Marshmallow, monitors how your device is being used and adjusts app activity accordingly. Basically, if you aren’t using a tablet all day while it lies on your table, Marshmallow will simply pause your apps so they don’t drain through your battery. That means apps won’t be primed with fresh content the 2nd you open them, but Google says a device’s standby time could dual. Not a bad tradeoff.
Better cut, copy, and paste
Another petite but meaningful switch in Marshmallow is the way that it treats copy and pasting text. Rather than making you leap up to the top of the screen to find and decipher the cut, copy, and paste buttons, Marshmallow will float the options directly above the text you’ve selected. It’s pretty much identical to how iOS does it, and it’s a solid switch. Even if it’s only a petite switch, it’s for something that you use a lot.
Chrome works inwards other apps
It’s always frustrating getting kicked out of an app and over to the web where you have to wait for a site to leisurely explosion, so Google is doing something about it. With a feature called Chrome Custom-made Tabs, Marshmallow will permit apps to preload certain web content before sending you over to an in-app Chrome tab. That idea is that you’re still visiting a live-updating website, but the practice should be much smoother.
Edge Movie: Hands-on with the Nexus 5X
These are the seven best fresh features of Android Marshmallow – The Edge
These are the seven best fresh features of Android Marshmallow
You’re going to want Android Marshmallow. Google’s latest version of Android may sound like a single headline feature followed by a list of little improvements, but they all add up to one significant update — there’s a reason Google is calling this release Android 6.0.
Marshmallow is going to make Android able to do a lot more for you, all while making key refinements across the OS that address longstanding issues. All in all, we’re looking at a smarter, sleeker, and more useable Android. So yeah, you’re going to want to update.
Of course, as always, when you can update is going to depend on who made your phone. Nexus devices will be updated almost instantly, but phones from Samsung, Motorola, Sony, LG, and others are going to be on their own timelines, some rapid, some slow, some nonexistent. Those phones may also get support for some features and not others, depending on how the device is customized.
Google may be announcing Marshmallow’s official release — coming next week — today, but it actually introduced its fresh features back in May. In case you missed the announcement or have forgotten what happened in the months since, here are the features we’re most excited for in the fresh release of Android.
Google Now on Tap
Google Now on Tap is lightly Marshmallow’s standout feature. It takes Google Now — the predictive assistant that’s been beside your home screen for a duo years — and lets it crawl through your apps so that you can get extra info on basically anything almost instantly.
Google Now will read your screen and tell you about what it sees
Here’s how it works: your press and hold the home button while inwards of any app, and Google Now will read the screen, look for anything interesting — like the name of a celebrity, an event, or a location — and then comeback information on what it sees in a little popup box on the bottom of the screen.
If someone texts you the name of a restaurant, for example, Now on Tap might see its name and present you with its location on a map. Or if you’re on a news story about a celebrity, Now on Tap might pull up their information from Wikipedia or give you the chance to hop to their page in the IMDb app.
It’s an exceptionally cool feature, and our initial tests displayed it working fairly well (albeit under a managed environment). This is going to be a big deal in Marshmallow and — more than likely — future versions of Android as well.
Case-by-case app permissions
This sounds insanely boring, but it’s a indeed significant update. To date, Android apps have asked you during their install process for permission to access everything and anything that they might need: things like your camera, location, message history, and so on. Often enough, you’ll see all sorts of things that it seems like an app shouldn’t need access to, but you don’t have the option of telling no to just one item or asking what anything is used for.
Under Marshmallow, this is going to switch. Developers will now be able to ask for permissions on a case-by-case basis. That means when you go to open up the camera in Instagram, for example, Instagram could produce a pop-up asking if you want to let it access your camera. That way you know exactly when an app is using a feature and why it’s using it. It also means you can download and install an app, use most of it, but prevent it from doing one or two things that you disapprove of.
Apps will have to update to the fresh way of doing things before all of this starts to happen. For now, Marshmallow will still let you go into settings to deal with the apps you already have set up. Apple has dealt with permissions on iOS in this manner for a while now, so some people may already be familiar with this treatment. Basically, it’s a good idea, and it’s about time it hit Android.
Fingerprint support
Fingerprint sensors have already popped up here and there on Android phones, but soon, they’re very likely going to be everywhere. That’s because Google is building dedicated support for fingerprint sensors into Android, so that phone makers don’t have to code it all in on their own. That means your next Android phone will likely let you use a fingerprint sensor to unlock your phone, make payments, and log into various apps and services. Basically, it’s going to be a thick convenience for both the people making Android phones and the people using them.
USB Type-C
Everyone hates buying fresh cables, but this time it’s worth it. USB Type-C (also called USB-C) is a little fresh reversible USB format that’s kind of sweeping the tech industry. Before you know it, it’s going to be used to charge most phones, tablets, and laptops, and for transferring data and movie inbetween devices. Marshmallow adds support for USB Type-C for Android phones and tablets, so there’s a very good chance that your next phone will use it. Get ready — you’ll never stab a Micro USB cable in the wrong direction again.
It seems like every fresh version of every operating system makes a claim about improving battery life, but Google’s latest improvement may actually be a meaningful one. Doze, a fresh feature in Marshmallow, monitors how your device is being used and adjusts app activity accordingly. Basically, if you aren’t using a tablet all day while it lies on your table, Marshmallow will simply pause your apps so they don’t drain through your battery. That means apps won’t be primed with fresh content the 2nd you open them, but Google says a device’s standby time could dual. Not a bad tradeoff.
Better cut, copy, and paste
Another puny but meaningful switch in Marshmallow is the way that it treats copy and pasting text. Rather than making you hop up to the top of the screen to find and decipher the cut, copy, and paste buttons, Marshmallow will float the options directly above the text you’ve selected. It’s pretty much identical to how iOS does it, and it’s a solid switch. Even if it’s only a petite switch, it’s for something that you use a lot.
Chrome works inwards other apps
It’s always frustrating getting kicked out of an app and over to the web where you have to wait for a site to leisurely stream, so Google is doing something about it. With a feature called Chrome Custom-made Tabs, Marshmallow will permit apps to preload certain web content before sending you over to an in-app Chrome tab. That idea is that you’re still visiting a live-updating website, but the practice should be much smoother.
Brink Movie: Hands-on with the Nexus 5X
These are the seven best fresh features of Android Marshmallow – The Brink
These are the seven best fresh features of Android Marshmallow
You’re going to want Android Marshmallow. Google’s latest version of Android may sound like a single headline feature followed by a list of lil’ improvements, but they all add up to one significant update — there’s a reason Google is calling this release Android 6.0.
Marshmallow is going to make Android able to do a lot more for you, all while making key refinements across the OS that address longstanding issues. All in all, we’re looking at a smarter, sleeker, and more useable Android. So yeah, you’re going to want to update.
Of course, as always, when you can update is going to depend on who made your phone. Nexus devices will be updated almost instantaneously, but phones from Samsung, Motorola, Sony, LG, and others are going to be on their own timelines, some quick, some slow, some nonexistent. Those phones may also get support for some features and not others, depending on how the device is customized.
Google may be announcing Marshmallow’s official release — coming next week — today, but it actually introduced its fresh features back in May. In case you missed the announcement or have forgotten what happened in the months since, here are the features we’re most excited for in the fresh release of Android.
Google Now on Tap
Google Now on Tap is lightly Marshmallow’s standout feature. It takes Google Now — the predictive assistant that’s been beside your home screen for a duo years — and lets it crawl through your apps so that you can get extra info on basically anything almost instantly.
Google Now will read your screen and tell you about what it sees
Here’s how it works: your press and hold the home button while inwards of any app, and Google Now will read the screen, look for anything interesting — like the name of a celebrity, an event, or a location — and then comeback information on what it sees in a little popup box on the bottom of the screen.
If someone texts you the name of a restaurant, for example, Now on Tap might see its name and present you with its location on a map. Or if you’re on a news story about a celebrity, Now on Tap might pull up their information from Wikipedia or give you the chance to hop to their page in the IMDb app.
It’s an exceptionally cool feature, and our initial tests displayed it working fairly well (albeit under a managed environment). This is going to be a big deal in Marshmallow and — more than likely — future versions of Android as well.
Case-by-case app permissions
This sounds insanely boring, but it’s a indeed significant update. To date, Android apps have asked you during their install process for permission to access everything and anything that they might need: things like your camera, location, message history, and so on. Often enough, you’ll see all sorts of things that it seems like an app shouldn’t need access to, but you don’t have the option of telling no to just one item or asking what anything is used for.
Under Marshmallow, this is going to switch. Developers will now be able to ask for permissions on a case-by-case basis. That means when you go to open up the camera in Instagram, for example, Instagram could produce a pop-up asking if you want to let it access your camera. That way you know exactly when an app is using a feature and why it’s using it. It also means you can download and install an app, use most of it, but prevent it from doing one or two things that you disapprove of.
Apps will have to update to the fresh way of doing things before all of this starts to happen. For now, Marshmallow will still let you go into settings to deal with the apps you already have set up. Apple has dealt with permissions on iOS in this manner for a while now, so some people may already be familiar with this treatment. Basically, it’s a good idea, and it’s about time it hit Android.
Fingerprint support
Fingerprint sensors have already popped up here and there on Android phones, but soon, they’re very likely going to be everywhere. That’s because Google is building dedicated support for fingerprint sensors into Android, so that phone makers don’t have to code it all in on their own. That means your next Android phone will likely let you use a fingerprint sensor to unlock your phone, make payments, and log into various apps and services. Basically, it’s going to be a phat convenience for both the people making Android phones and the people using them.
USB Type-C
Everyone hates buying fresh cables, but this time it’s worth it. USB Type-C (also called USB-C) is a little fresh reversible USB format that’s kind of sweeping the tech industry. Before you know it, it’s going to be used to charge most phones, tablets, and laptops, and for transferring data and movie inbetween devices. Marshmallow adds support for USB Type-C for Android phones and tablets, so there’s a very good chance that your next phone will use it. Get ready — you’ll never stab a Micro USB cable in the wrong direction again.
It seems like every fresh version of every operating system makes a claim about improving battery life, but Google’s latest improvement may actually be a meaningful one. Doze, a fresh feature in Marshmallow, monitors how your device is being used and adjusts app activity accordingly. Basically, if you aren’t using a tablet all day while it lies on your table, Marshmallow will simply pause your apps so they don’t drain through your battery. That means apps won’t be primed with fresh content the 2nd you open them, but Google says a device’s standby time could dual. Not a bad tradeoff.
Better cut, copy, and paste
Another petite but meaningful switch in Marshmallow is the way that it treats copy and pasting text. Rather than making you leap up to the top of the screen to find and decipher the cut, copy, and paste buttons, Marshmallow will float the options directly above the text you’ve selected. It’s pretty much identical to how iOS does it, and it’s a solid switch. Even if it’s only a puny switch, it’s for something that you use a lot.
Chrome works inwards other apps
It’s always frustrating getting kicked out of an app and over to the web where you have to wait for a site to leisurely geyser, so Google is doing something about it. With a feature called Chrome Custom-made Tabs, Marshmallow will permit apps to preload certain web content before sending you over to an in-app Chrome tab. That idea is that you’re still visiting a live-updating website, but the practice should be much smoother.
Edge Movie: Hands-on with the Nexus 5X