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Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Google unveils new Nexus 7 tablet, Android 4.3 and Chromecast


During an event in San Francisco on Wednesday, Google unveiled a brand new Nexus 7 tablet, Android 4.3, Chromecast, and more.


"Today, we are going to talk about two things," Sundar Pichai - senior vice president of Android, Chrome and Apps - explained as the event began. The first is a new Android device, the second is a new Chrome device.


Android 4.3 and the new Nexus 7Pichai surrendered the stage to Hugo Barra, vice president of Android product management, to take care of the Android portion of Wednesday's announcement. Barra explained that the new Nexus 7 is a few millimeters thinner and narrower than the prior model. "It's a much more comfortable grip," he said. The new 7-inch tablet has a better screen than ever as well. It has gone from offering 1280 x 800 pixels in the prior model to 1920 x 1200 pixels in the new one and from 216 pixels per inch (ppi) to 323 ppi. The RAM jumps from 1GB to 2 GB. The tablet has a 1.2-megapixel in the front and a 5-megapixel camera in the back. The new Nexus 7 will be available in three flavors: A 16GB Wi-Fi-only model for $229, a 32GB Wi-Fi-only model for $269, and a 32GB LTE-capable model for $349.



The new tablet will ship with Android 4.3, the newest version of Jelly Bean. While Android 4.2 introduced multi-user functionalities, Android 4.3 adds "Restricted Profiles." This feature allows apps to be restricted on a user-level so that apps can behave differently based on the active user. Android 4.3 will also support Bluetooth Smart, which is a low-energy Bluetooth standard.


While Android 4.3 will ship with the new Nexus 7, it will be pushed out to the last-generation Nexus 7, Nexus 4, and Galaxy Nexus beginning on Wednesday. The HTC One and Samsung S4 which are sold with the "Nexus Experience" will receive Android 4.3 at a later time.



Chromecast"The average household has three televisions," Pichai explained before pointing out that many users struggle to get video content from their phones, tablets, and laptops to their televisions. Google's solution to this problem is called Chromecast. Unsurprisingly, it's based on Chrome.


Chromecast is a small dongle which you plug into your television's HDMI input in order to push content from your phone, tablet, or computer. Just open up YouTube, for example, and you'll find a new "Cast" button that'll get things started. You'll be able to push content, adjust the volume, and more right from your phone. (And yes, you'll even have a "Cast" button on the iOS version of the YouTube app, not just on its Android counterpart.) Other apps, such as Netflix, Google Play Movies, Google Play Music, and Pandora - Chromecast pushes music as well, not just video - will also offer support for Chromecast.


Want more tech news or interesting links? You'll get plenty of both if you keep up with Rosa Golijan, the writer of this post, by following her on Twitter, subscribing to her Facebook posts, or circling her on Google+.

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