Google announces Nexus 6, Nexus 9, Nexus Player and Android 5.0 Lollipop

Joonikko

Shades, eternal shades.
|K3| Member
|K3| Media Team
Nexus 6
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http://www.google.com/intl/all/nexus/6/
  • Qualcomm Snapdragon 805 2.7 GHz processor
  • Adreno 420 GPU
  • 5.96" 1440x2560 AMOLED display (493 ppi)
  • 13 megapixel f/2.0 rear camera with OIS
  • 2 megapixel front camera
  • 3220 mAh battery
  • two front-facing speakers
  • 32 or 64GB of storage
  • blue or white color options

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Nexus 9
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http://www.google.com/intl/all/nexus/9/
http://www.theverge.com/2014/10/15/6982223/google-htc-nexus-9-announcement-pricing-release-date

Specs:
  • Dimensions: 152.68 x 228.25 x 7.95 mm
  • Weight: 425 g
  • 6700 mAh battery
  • 8.9" IPS LCD display with 4:3 aspect ratio, 2048x1536 resolution & Gorilla Glass 3
  • 64-bit Nvidia Tegra K1 processor & Kepler based GPU
  • 2GB of RAM
  • 16 or 32GB of storage
  • Quad-band GSM, CDMA, Penta-band HSPA, LTE conectivity
  • 802.11ac 2x2 (MIMO) WiFi
  • NCF & Bluetooth 4.1
  • 8MP f/2.4 rear camera with auto-focus and LED flash
  • 1.6MP f/2.4 front camera
  • dual front-facing speakers & dual microphones

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Nexus Player
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http://www.google.com/intl/all/nexus/player/
http://www.theverge.com/2014/10/15/6982375/google-nexus-player-android-tv-set-top-box-announced

Specs:
  • 1.8GHz Quad Core Intel Atom processor
  • 802.11ac 2x2 (MIMO)
  • HDMI Out
In-box:
  • Nexus Player
  • Remote with voice search
  • Power adapter
  • 2 AAA batteries
  • Quick-start guide
  • Warranty, Safety and Regulatory booklet
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Android 5.0 Lollipop
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https://android.com/versions/lollipop-5-0/
http://www.theverge.com/2014/10/15/6982167/google-android-5-0-l-lollipop-announcement-release

Material Design
https://www.google.com/design/spec/material-design/introduction.html
A bold, colorful, and responsive UI design for consistent, intuitive experiences across all your devices
  • Responsive, natural motion, realistic lighting and shadows, and familiar visual elements make it easier to navigate your device
  • Vivid new colors, typography, and edge-to-edge imagery help to focus your attention
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Notifications
New ways to control when and how you receive messages - only get interrupted when you want to be
  • View and respond to messages directly from your lock screen. Includes the ability to hide sensitive content for these notifications
  • For fewer disruptions, turn on Priority mode via your device’s volume button so only certain people and notifications get through. Or schedule recurring downtime like 10pm to 8am when only Priority notifications can get through
  • With Lollipop, incoming phone calls won’t interrupt what you’re watching or playing. You can choose to answer the call or just keep doing what you’re doing
  • Control the notifications triggered by your apps; hide sensitive content and prioritize or turn off the app’s notifications entirely
  • More intelligent ranking of notifications based on who they’re from and the type of communication. See all your notifications in one place by tapping the top of the screen

Battery
Power for the long haul
  • A battery saver feature which extends device use by up to 90 mins
  • Estimated time left to fully charge is displayed when your device is plugged in
  • Estimated time left on your device before you need to charge again can now be found in battery settings

Security
Keep your stuff safe and sound
  • New devices come with encryption automatically turned on to help protect data on lost or stolen devices
  • SELinux enforcing for all applications means even better protection against vulnerabilities and malware
  • Use Android Smart Lock to secure your phone or tablet by pairing it with a trusted device like your wearable or even your car

Device Sharing
More flexible sharing with family and friends
  • Multiple users for phones. If you forget your phone, you still can call any of your friends (or access any of your messages, photos etc.) by simply logging into another Android phone running Lollipop. Also perfect for families who want to share a phone, but not their stuff
  • Guest user for phones and tablets means you can lend your device and not your stuff
  • Screen pinning: pin your screen so another user can access just that content without messing with your other stuff

New Quick settings
Get to the most frequently used settings with just two swipes down from the top of the screen
  • New handy controls like flashlight, hotspot, screen rotation and cast screen controls
  • Easier on/off toggles for Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and location
  • Manually adjust your brightness for certain conditions. Then, adaptive brightness will kick in based on ambient lighting

Connectivity
A better internet connection everywhere and more powerful Bluetooth low energy capabilities
  • Improved network handoffs resulting in limited interruption in connectivity. For example, continue your video chat or VoIP calls without interruption as you leave the house and switch from your home Wi-Fi back to cellular
  • Improved network selection logic so that your device connects only if there is a verified internet connection on Wi-Fi
  • Power-efficient scanning for nearby Bluetooth low energy (“BLE”) devices like wearables or beacons
  • New BLE peripheral mode

Runtime and Performance
A faster, smoother and more powerful computing experience
  • ART, an entirely new Android runtime, improves application performance and responsiveness
  • Up to 4x performance improvements
  • Smoother UI for complex, visually rich applications
  • Compacting backgrounded apps and services so you can do more at once
  • Support for 64 bit devices, like the Nexus 9, brings desktop class CPUs to Android
  • Support for 64-bit SoCs using ARM, x86, and MIPS-based cores
  • Shipping 64-bit native apps like Chrome, Gmail, Calendar, Google Play Music, and more
  • Pure Java language apps run as 64-bit apps automatically

Media
Bolder graphics and improved audio, video, and camera capabilities
  • Lower latency audio input ensuring that music and communication applications that have strict delay requirements provide an amazing realtime experience
  • Multi-channel audio stream mixing means professional audio applications can now mix up to eight channels including 5.1 and 7.1 channels
  • USB Audio support means you can plug USB microphones, speakers, and a myriad of other USB audio devices like amplifiers and mixers into your Android device
  • OpenGL ES 3.1 and Android extension pack brings Android to the forefront of mobile graphics putting it on par with desktop and console class performance
  • A range of new professional photography features for Android Lollipop that let you
  • Capture full resolution frames around 30 fps
  • Support raw formats like YUV and Bayer RAW
  • Control capture settings for the sensor, lens, and flash per individual frame
  • Capture metadata like noise models and optical information
  • State of the art video technology with support for HEVC main profile to allow for UHD 4K 10-bit video playback, tunneled hardware video decoding to save power and improved HLS support for streaming

OK Google
Easy access to information and performing tasks
  • Even if your screen is off, you can say "OK Google" on devices with digital signal processing support such as Nexus 6 and Nexus 9
  • Talk to Google on the go to get quick answers, send a text, get directions and more

Android TV
Support for living room devices
  • User interface adapted for the living room
  • Less browsing, more watching with personalized recommendations for content like movies and TV shows
  • Voice search for Google Play, YouTube and supported apps so you can just say what you want to see
  • Console-style Android gaming on your TV with a gamepad
  • Cast your favorite entertainment apps to your big screen with Google Cast support for Android TV devices

Accessibility
Enhanced low vision and color blind capabilities
  • Boost text contrast or invert colors to improve legibility
  • Adjust display to improve color differentiation

Now in 68+ languages
15 new additions
  • Basque, Bengali, Burmese, Chinese (Hong Kong), Galician, Icelandic, Kannada, Kyrgyz, Macedonian, Malayalam, Marathi, Nepali, Sinhala, Tamil, Telugu

Device set up
Get up and running in no-time
  • Tap & go: instant set up of your new Android phone or tablet by simply tapping it to your old one (requires NFC)
  • Whenever you get a new Android phone or tablet, you can bring over your apps from Google Play automatically from any of your old Android devices

And a whole lot more
  • Tap & pay: easily manage multiple payment apps by quickly switching between them
  • Print preview and page range support
  • Revamped display for battery, Bluetooth, data usage, and Wi-Fi settings and new search functionality
  • New device level feedback for Nexus devices in Settings > about phone > send feedback
  • Easier sharing with
  • Improved ranking of your options within the share menu
  • Android Beam: lets you share a file with someone nearby by gently tapping the two devices together
  • Where supported by the hardware, your device will wake up as soon as you pick it up or tap the screen twice
  • Improved hardware keyboard accessory support including support for multilingual, emoji input, search key, and improved app and system key chords


After an extended testing and preview period, Google has announced the final release of Android L, its latest version of the world's most popular mobile platform. Android 5.0 Lollipop is debuting on three new Nexus devices — the Nexus 6 smartphone, Nexus 9 tablet, and Nexus Player streaming media device — and will be available on the Nexus 4, Nexus 5, Nexus 7, Nexus 10, and Google Play Edition devices in the coming weeks.

Lollipop's most obvious new features come in the form of visual enhancements and user interface changes, which Google has dubbed Material Design. The platform has new, more fluid animations, a cleaner design with a bolder color palette, a revamped multittasking menu, and offers new ways to interact with your voice. Many of the new Material Design features can be seen in the recent updates that Google has released for its own Android apps such as Google+. The Material Design initiative is meant to unify the software's look and feel across various form factors, whether that's a tablet, smartphone, home media streamer, or something else.

In addition to a visual overhaul, Lollipop brings over 5,000 new APIs for developers to tap into and lets multiple different Android devices with various form factors work better together. Google says that things such as songs, photos, apps, and recent searches can be seamlessly synced across various Android devices. Lollipop also includes new notification controls to limit alerts during meetings and other times, a new battery saver mode that can eke out 90 more minutes of life between charges, multiple user accounts, guest user modes, and new ways to secure your device via trusted Bluetooth connections. Lollipop will also include a protection against resetting the phone to factory defaults, which is designed to make it difficult for phone thieves to use a stolen device. Many of these features have been implemented by various Android device makers on their own smartphones and tablets for some time, but Google is now making sure they are part of the core Android experience.

Android 5.0 Lollipop is a big release for Google — it's the most significant visual update to Android since 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich was released in 2011, and it lays the foundation for Android to grow as a platform outside of smartphones and tablets. Google is very clearly pushing Android as the software for the future, and it wants Android to be on every connected device we interact with. Lollipop is the first step to getting there.

 
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WaLLy

Lieutenant General
|K3| Executive
I don't like the design of the Nexus 9.

And what happened to Android L? Is it 5.0?
 

DamageINC

K3's Useless Admin
|K3| Executive
I pondered a Nexus when i got my tablet, but quality control issues and the lack of expandable storage were deal breakers. Hopefully they fixed the QC.

I have 32 gb of music alone on my Galaxy tab. No expandable storage on any device is a deal breaker for me.

I'm not willing to pay $100's more for storage on some devices when i can get an SD card for a fraction of the price for devices that support it. Baffles me that people do that.
 

DamageINC

K3's Useless Admin
|K3| Executive
Have you looked into Spotify for this? I have and don't plan on downloading or syncing music to my devices anymore.

I don't want Spotify. I like whole albums in good quality or custom playlists that play without interruptions , buffering, etc. It would be a PITA to be changing songs i didn't like while i was on the treadmill. If anything, i would use LAST.FM, which plays from my library.
 

WaLLy

Lieutenant General
|K3| Executive
Spotify - You make your own playlists. It also plays from your library. Excellent quality too.
 

DamageINC

K3's Useless Admin
|K3| Executive
Maybe I'll check it out, but ad's and possible buffering issues still make it a lot less desirable than using Winamp on my tablet.
 
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