app experience

AppWizard
May 22, 2025
Google has announced that app developers will soon be able to pause the release of their apps and updates through the Play Console and publishing API. This new functionality allows developers to stop the distribution of problematic versions to new users, addressing a significant gap in the current system. Previously, developers had no official means to halt the rollout of updates after a major bug was discovered, complicating the release process. The upcoming feature aims to streamline developers' workflows and enhance user safety by preventing users from unknowingly downloading problematic app versions.
AppWizard
May 21, 2025
Google is expanding Android Auto by introducing new app categories, including browser apps and video apps, which will be compatible with phones running Android 16 in select vehicles while parked. Additionally, weather apps have graduated from beta status, allowing developers to publish them without extra approval, as long as they meet quality guidelines.
AppWizard
May 16, 2025
Google has restricted file upload capabilities for the Nextcloud Files Android app by revoking the "All files access" permission, which has been essential for the app since 2011. This change prevents Android users from uploading various file types to their Nextcloud accounts. Nextcloud has expressed frustration over this decision, suggesting it is a strategic move by Google to maintain dominance in the cloud storage market and favor its own applications. The alternatives proposed by Google, such as the MediaStore API or Storage Access Framework (SAF), do not meet Nextcloud's functionality needs. Nextcloud draws parallels to past corporate tactics that limited competition and highlights ongoing concerns regarding fair competition and regulatory responses.
AppWizard
May 14, 2025
APK stands for Android Application Package, which is a file format essential for distributing, installing, and managing mobile applications on the Android platform. An APK contains all the necessary code, resources, and instructions for an app to run on Android devices. Key components of an APK include DEX files (app code), assets and resources (images, sounds, layouts), certificates and security signatures (for verification), and the AndroidManifest.xml file (which outlines permissions and components). When an app is installed, the APK is unpacked, permissions are granted, and its integrity is verified through digital signatures. APK files support various applications and games, allowing for manual installations and updates, and they ensure universal compatibility across devices. Users can adjust security settings to allow installations from unknown sources, but Android restricts this by default for safety.
AppWizard
April 17, 2025
Gemini 2.5 Flash allows developers to set a token limit for reasoning or disable it entirely. Google charges [openai_gpt model="gpt-4o-mini" prompt="Summarize the content and extract only the fact described in the text bellow. The summary shall NOT include a title, introduction and conclusion. Text: Gemini 2.5 Flash introduces a significant advancement for developers, enabling them to set a token limit for reasoning or opt to disable it entirely. Google has established a pricing structure that charges [cyberseo_openai model="gpt-4o-mini" prompt="Rewrite a news story for a business publication, in a calm style with creativity and flair based on text below, making sure it reads like human-written text in a natural way. The article shall NOT include a title, introduction and conclusion. The article shall NOT start from a title. Response language English. Generate HTML-formatted content using tag for a sub-heading. You can use only , , , , and HTML tags if necessary. Text: Gemini 2.5 Flash will allow developers to set a token limit for thinking or simply disable thinking altogether. Google has provided pricing per 1 million tokens at $0.15 for input, and output comes in two flavors. Without thinking, outputs are $0.60, but enabling thinking boosts it to $3.50. The thinking budget option will allow developers to fine-tune the model to do what they want for an amount of money they're willing to pay. According to Doshi, you can actually see the reasoning improvements in benchmarks as you add more token budget. 2.5 Flash outputs get better as you add more reasoning tokens. Credit: Google 2.5 Flash outputs get better as you add more reasoning tokens. Credit: Google Like 2.5 Pro, this model supports Dynamic Thinking, which can automatically adjust the amount of work that goes into generating an output based on the complexity of the input. The new Flash model goes further by allowing developers to control thinking. According to Doshi, Google is launching the model now to guide improvements in these dynamic features. "Part of the reason we're putting the model out in preview is to get feedback from developers on where the model meets their expectations, where it under-thinks or over-thinks, so that we can continue to iterate on [dynamic thinking]," says Doshi. Don't expect that kind of precise control for consumer Gemini products right now, though. Doshi notes that the main reason you'd want to toggle thinking or set a budget is to control costs and latency, which matters to developers. However, Google is hoping that what it learns from the preview phase will help it understand what users and developers expect from the model. "Creating a simpler Gemini app experience for consumers while still offering flexibility is the goal," Doshi says. With the rapid cadence of releases, a final release for Gemini 2.5 doesn't seem that far off. Google still doesn't have any specifics to share on that front, but with the new developer options and availability in the Gemini app, Doshi tells us the team hopes to move the 2.5 family to general availability soon." temperature="0.3" top_p="1.0" best_of="1" presence_penalty="0.1" ].15 for every million tokens used in input. The output pricing varies based on the reasoning capabilities employed. For outputs without reasoning, the cost is [cyberseo_openai model="gpt-4o-mini" prompt="Rewrite a news story for a business publication, in a calm style with creativity and flair based on text below, making sure it reads like human-written text in a natural way. The article shall NOT include a title, introduction and conclusion. The article shall NOT start from a title. Response language English. Generate HTML-formatted content using tag for a sub-heading. You can use only , , , , and HTML tags if necessary. Text: Gemini 2.5 Flash will allow developers to set a token limit for thinking or simply disable thinking altogether. Google has provided pricing per 1 million tokens at $0.15 for input, and output comes in two flavors. Without thinking, outputs are $0.60, but enabling thinking boosts it to $3.50. The thinking budget option will allow developers to fine-tune the model to do what they want for an amount of money they're willing to pay. According to Doshi, you can actually see the reasoning improvements in benchmarks as you add more token budget. 2.5 Flash outputs get better as you add more reasoning tokens. Credit: Google 2.5 Flash outputs get better as you add more reasoning tokens. Credit: Google Like 2.5 Pro, this model supports Dynamic Thinking, which can automatically adjust the amount of work that goes into generating an output based on the complexity of the input. The new Flash model goes further by allowing developers to control thinking. According to Doshi, Google is launching the model now to guide improvements in these dynamic features. "Part of the reason we're putting the model out in preview is to get feedback from developers on where the model meets their expectations, where it under-thinks or over-thinks, so that we can continue to iterate on [dynamic thinking]," says Doshi. Don't expect that kind of precise control for consumer Gemini products right now, though. Doshi notes that the main reason you'd want to toggle thinking or set a budget is to control costs and latency, which matters to developers. However, Google is hoping that what it learns from the preview phase will help it understand what users and developers expect from the model. "Creating a simpler Gemini app experience for consumers while still offering flexibility is the goal," Doshi says. With the rapid cadence of releases, a final release for Gemini 2.5 doesn't seem that far off. Google still doesn't have any specifics to share on that front, but with the new developer options and availability in the Gemini app, Doshi tells us the team hopes to move the 2.5 family to general availability soon." temperature="0.3" top_p="1.0" best_of="1" presence_penalty="0.1" ].60, while enabling reasoning elevates the price to .50. This flexibility allows developers to tailor the model's performance according to their budgetary constraints and desired outcomes. As noted by Doshi, enhancements in reasoning capabilities become evident in benchmarks as developers allocate more tokens to the budget. 2.5 Flash outputs get better as you add more reasoning tokens. Credit: Google Similar to its predecessor, 2.5 Pro, the new model incorporates Dynamic Thinking, which intelligently adjusts the processing effort based on the complexity of the input. However, Gemini 2.5 Flash takes this a step further by granting developers enhanced control over the reasoning process. Doshi explains that the model is being launched in preview mode to gather valuable feedback from developers regarding its performance—specifically, where it meets expectations and where it may either underperform or overthink. While such precise control may not yet be available for consumer-facing Gemini products, Doshi emphasizes that the primary motivation for developers to toggle thinking or set a budget lies in managing costs and latency—factors that are crucial in development environments. Google aims to leverage insights gained during the preview phase to better understand user and developer expectations. "Creating a simpler Gemini app experience for consumers while still offering flexibility is the goal," Doshi remarks. With the rapid pace of updates, the final release of Gemini 2.5 appears to be on the horizon. Although specific details remain undisclosed, the introduction of new developer options and their integration into the Gemini app suggests that the team is optimistic about moving the 2.5 family towards general availability in the near future." max_tokens="3500" temperature="0.3" top_p="1.0" best_of="1" presence_penalty="0.1" frequency_penalty="frequency_penalty"].15 per million tokens for input, with output pricing varying based on reasoning capabilities: [openai_gpt model="gpt-4o-mini" prompt="Summarize the content and extract only the fact described in the text bellow. The summary shall NOT include a title, introduction and conclusion. Text: Gemini 2.5 Flash introduces a significant advancement for developers, enabling them to set a token limit for reasoning or opt to disable it entirely. Google has established a pricing structure that charges [cyberseo_openai model="gpt-4o-mini" prompt="Rewrite a news story for a business publication, in a calm style with creativity and flair based on text below, making sure it reads like human-written text in a natural way. The article shall NOT include a title, introduction and conclusion. The article shall NOT start from a title. Response language English. Generate HTML-formatted content using tag for a sub-heading. You can use only , , , , and HTML tags if necessary. Text: Gemini 2.5 Flash will allow developers to set a token limit for thinking or simply disable thinking altogether. Google has provided pricing per 1 million tokens at $0.15 for input, and output comes in two flavors. Without thinking, outputs are $0.60, but enabling thinking boosts it to $3.50. The thinking budget option will allow developers to fine-tune the model to do what they want for an amount of money they're willing to pay. According to Doshi, you can actually see the reasoning improvements in benchmarks as you add more token budget. 2.5 Flash outputs get better as you add more reasoning tokens. Credit: Google 2.5 Flash outputs get better as you add more reasoning tokens. Credit: Google Like 2.5 Pro, this model supports Dynamic Thinking, which can automatically adjust the amount of work that goes into generating an output based on the complexity of the input. The new Flash model goes further by allowing developers to control thinking. According to Doshi, Google is launching the model now to guide improvements in these dynamic features. "Part of the reason we're putting the model out in preview is to get feedback from developers on where the model meets their expectations, where it under-thinks or over-thinks, so that we can continue to iterate on [dynamic thinking]," says Doshi. Don't expect that kind of precise control for consumer Gemini products right now, though. Doshi notes that the main reason you'd want to toggle thinking or set a budget is to control costs and latency, which matters to developers. However, Google is hoping that what it learns from the preview phase will help it understand what users and developers expect from the model. "Creating a simpler Gemini app experience for consumers while still offering flexibility is the goal," Doshi says. With the rapid cadence of releases, a final release for Gemini 2.5 doesn't seem that far off. Google still doesn't have any specifics to share on that front, but with the new developer options and availability in the Gemini app, Doshi tells us the team hopes to move the 2.5 family to general availability soon." temperature="0.3" top_p="1.0" best_of="1" presence_penalty="0.1" ].15 for every million tokens used in input. The output pricing varies based on the reasoning capabilities employed. For outputs without reasoning, the cost is [cyberseo_openai model="gpt-4o-mini" prompt="Rewrite a news story for a business publication, in a calm style with creativity and flair based on text below, making sure it reads like human-written text in a natural way. The article shall NOT include a title, introduction and conclusion. The article shall NOT start from a title. Response language English. Generate HTML-formatted content using tag for a sub-heading. You can use only , , , , and HTML tags if necessary. Text: Gemini 2.5 Flash will allow developers to set a token limit for thinking or simply disable thinking altogether. Google has provided pricing per 1 million tokens at $0.15 for input, and output comes in two flavors. Without thinking, outputs are $0.60, but enabling thinking boosts it to $3.50. The thinking budget option will allow developers to fine-tune the model to do what they want for an amount of money they're willing to pay. According to Doshi, you can actually see the reasoning improvements in benchmarks as you add more token budget. 2.5 Flash outputs get better as you add more reasoning tokens. Credit: Google 2.5 Flash outputs get better as you add more reasoning tokens. Credit: Google Like 2.5 Pro, this model supports Dynamic Thinking, which can automatically adjust the amount of work that goes into generating an output based on the complexity of the input. The new Flash model goes further by allowing developers to control thinking. According to Doshi, Google is launching the model now to guide improvements in these dynamic features. "Part of the reason we're putting the model out in preview is to get feedback from developers on where the model meets their expectations, where it under-thinks or over-thinks, so that we can continue to iterate on [dynamic thinking]," says Doshi. Don't expect that kind of precise control for consumer Gemini products right now, though. Doshi notes that the main reason you'd want to toggle thinking or set a budget is to control costs and latency, which matters to developers. However, Google is hoping that what it learns from the preview phase will help it understand what users and developers expect from the model. "Creating a simpler Gemini app experience for consumers while still offering flexibility is the goal," Doshi says. With the rapid cadence of releases, a final release for Gemini 2.5 doesn't seem that far off. Google still doesn't have any specifics to share on that front, but with the new developer options and availability in the Gemini app, Doshi tells us the team hopes to move the 2.5 family to general availability soon." temperature="0.3" top_p="1.0" best_of="1" presence_penalty="0.1" ].60, while enabling reasoning elevates the price to .50. This flexibility allows developers to tailor the model's performance according to their budgetary constraints and desired outcomes. As noted by Doshi, enhancements in reasoning capabilities become evident in benchmarks as developers allocate more tokens to the budget. 2.5 Flash outputs get better as you add more reasoning tokens. Credit: Google Similar to its predecessor, 2.5 Pro, the new model incorporates Dynamic Thinking, which intelligently adjusts the processing effort based on the complexity of the input. However, Gemini 2.5 Flash takes this a step further by granting developers enhanced control over the reasoning process. Doshi explains that the model is being launched in preview mode to gather valuable feedback from developers regarding its performance—specifically, where it meets expectations and where it may either underperform or overthink. While such precise control may not yet be available for consumer-facing Gemini products, Doshi emphasizes that the primary motivation for developers to toggle thinking or set a budget lies in managing costs and latency—factors that are crucial in development environments. Google aims to leverage insights gained during the preview phase to better understand user and developer expectations. "Creating a simpler Gemini app experience for consumers while still offering flexibility is the goal," Doshi remarks. With the rapid pace of updates, the final release of Gemini 2.5 appears to be on the horizon. Although specific details remain undisclosed, the introduction of new developer options and their integration into the Gemini app suggests that the team is optimistic about moving the 2.5 family towards general availability in the near future." max_tokens="3500" temperature="0.3" top_p="1.0" best_of="1" presence_penalty="0.1" frequency_penalty="frequency_penalty"].60 without reasoning and .50 with reasoning. The model supports Dynamic Thinking, which adjusts processing based on input complexity. Developers can control the reasoning process to manage costs and latency. Google is currently in a preview phase to gather feedback from developers to improve the model. The final release of Gemini 2.5 is anticipated soon, with new developer options integrated into the Gemini app.
AppWizard
April 8, 2025
Meta is expanding its “Teen Accounts” initiative to include Facebook and Messenger, which were initially introduced on Instagram. This feature automatically implements privacy settings, content restrictions, and parental controls for users under 18. The initial rollout targets users in the United States, the United Kingdom, Australia, and Canada, with plans for global availability. Teen Accounts aim to reduce exposure to harmful content and enhance parental oversight by limiting interactions to friends or previously contacted users. Meta reports that 54 million teens worldwide have adopted Teen Accounts on Instagram, with 97% of teens aged 13-15 opting to retain their built-in protections. A study showed that 94% of parents found Teen Accounts helpful, and 85% believed they fostered a positive online experience. Additional protections for teens under 16 on Instagram include requiring parental approval for live broadcasts and disabling nudity protection. Meta has also introduced features to encourage breaks from device usage, such as daily reminders and the activation of “Quiet Mode” at night.
AppWizard
April 8, 2025
Clearing the cache can reclaim storage space and improve device performance without compromising personal data. The cache stores temporary files that can accumulate and hinder device operation. To clear the cache for the Facebook app, navigate to Settings, select Apps, find Facebook, choose Storage, and select Clear Cache. This action removes junk files while preserving personal information.
AppWizard
April 8, 2025
Meta has introduced Teen Accounts on Facebook and Messenger to create a safer online environment for younger users by limiting exposure to inappropriate content. The feature is currently being rolled out in the United States, the United Kingdom, Australia, and Canada, with plans for expansion to more regions. This initiative follows the introduction of Teen Accounts on Instagram last year in response to scrutiny from US lawmakers about protective measures for adolescents.
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