Android Co-Founder Andy Rubin Leaving Google
An anonymous reader writes: The Wall Street Journal reports that Andy Rubin is leaving Google. Rubin co-founded Android in 2003 and stayed on when the company was acquired by Google in 2005. Rubin led Android through the acquisition of over a billion users, until 2013 when he moved to Google's robotics division. He was replaced in the Android division by Sundar Pichai, who continues in charge of that, Chrome, Google+, and many other products. Rubin's robotics role will be filled by James Kuffner. "Mr. Rubin's departure is a blow to Google's robotics efforts. However, Mr. Kuffner is experienced in the sector, having worked on human-like robot technology for over two decades, including seven years at Carnegie Mellon University and five years on Google's self-driving car project."
Haha looks like someone forgot the Post Anonymously check box.
You are all a bunch of idots.
How come when I update my monster.com profile it's not news?
"Have you ever thought about just turning off the TV, sitting down with your kids, and hitting them?"
If you can genuinely create good, patentable products, it's moronic to work for a large company and hand them the rights. Create and patent them yourself, and get all the financial windfall from doing so.
I'm sure sex bots will be popular category in the future. Is there really a need for human-like robot technology?
When I can plug in an iOS device into the USB port of computer and navigate its directory structure then I'll consider iOS as advanced as Android.
The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
Apparently he will NOT be missed by anyone in the robotics division...
Wait, what?
I have two Android devices, and an iOS device ... and I've only recently retired my iPad 1.
In what way is Android playing catch up with iOS? Are they features people actually use or even know about?
Because, I would say pound for pound, feature for feature, my Android devices do as much as my iOS devices.
I don't pick up my Android phone or tablet and think "boy, if it only had this feature that iOS has, it would be a complete device".
In fact, I'm not aware of a single feature I ever use or care about that iOS has which Android doesn't.
For that matter, I'd be hard pressed to tell you a feature that either has that the other doesn't that I've ever wished was there.
Lost at C:>. Found at C.
Ooooh, files and directory browsing. That's what I enjoy doing with my computer! Fun fun fun!
What was the first version that didn't?
No, seriously ... my up-to-date Nexus 7 allows this.
So, either you know something I don't, or you're making an unfounded accusation.
Lost at C:>. Found at C.
He's probably thinking of when it switched to MTP. There were a few glitches when that happened, some linux boxes could not mount it without fiddling, but it's pretty universally supported now. Except on OSX, I think?
In what way is Android playing catch up with iOS? Are they features people actually use or even know about?
Well, let's see: how about not letting Facetwitterlinkbook have access to absolutely everything on your device because their app demands so many permissions and you can't deniy specific ones?
OSX doesn't allow it as far as I can tell ... I think in no small part because of a concession Apple made to the music labels.
I understand the point, just never found myself needing it ... in all honesty, I've never used it more than once or twice on my Android devices either.
Lost at C:>. Found at C.
What I enjoy is having folders like Documents, Videos and Music, and being able to copy documents, videos and music into them, rather than having everything stored in app-centric folders which are hidden from me. What I like is not having to use a horror story like iTunes to copy video files, ePubs and music.
I bought a Nexus 5 and 7 last year, handed my iPhone to my daughter, and have never looked back. The Nexus 5, in particular, is just a little over half the price of a a comparable iPhone and is a helluva lot more usable. And if I really need something from the iTunes store, like the upcoming Pink Floyd record, I know I'll be able to play the music on my Android devices.
The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
Settings->Privacy->AppName
Your just stupid if you didn't know this already since its regularly brought up as a shitty thing that android lacks.
And you've never used an iOS device either ... Since the OS asks you before allowing the app to do things. It's a system that requires you to opt in, and the app has to work if you opt-out or it gets rejected from the App Store unless the functionality is central to the app.
A camera app will not get approved if it won't work when denied access to your contacts, as an example.
Android is designed to pretend you have options when you don't. It's all or nothing and the permissions aren't even fine grained anymore, they are broken into large groups so updates can do all sorts of stuff that they didn't originally.
Android is decidedly anti-owner in this respect where as iOS is the opposite, decidedly pro-owner
Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
special software on the computer
What, cryptsetup?
My God, it's Full of Source!
OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
So which are you then, an asshole, a douchebag, or just some useless sack of shit with a big mouth?
Yes, there are the settings which Apple has placed under there for what they list as privacy. But what there isn't is a "show be a given app, show me all the permissions for that app, and let me selectively disable them". Android doesn't have that either.
My problem, is I have no idea if there are other permissions Apple hasn't decided are privacy related or not. Like sending information to a 3rd party site when it's supposed to be a flashlight.
So, why don't you stop acting like a dick, and try acting like an adult instead of the childish idiot you seem to prefer?
I have both an Android device and iOS device sitting on the table in front of me ... so maybe instead of you just being a loud mouth asshole, you give me the benefit of not assuming I'm being a troll? Something which I'm afraid I can't extend to you.
Lost at C:>. Found at C.
There are now some limitations when browsing directories directly on an android phone, the SD card is read-only from the filesystem, but the limitation is NOT present when browsing directories from the PC, so AC seems confused.
>Your just stupid...
Nice hostility and poor spelling you have going there. Are you drinking?
Those settings in iOS, while they might not be the level of control you are looking for, are more than what Android offers. So that answers your orignal question of "In what way is Android playing catch up with iOS? Are they features people actually use or even know about?"
What permissions means to Android and iOS are different.
On Android, permissions are more broadly defined. Access to if you're on WiFi, Access to the status bar, access to the current time zone, etc.
Some of these things are taken for granted on iOS. Like detecting if you're on WiFi or not. I know Overcast does this to prevent downloading over mobile data by default. I don't think apps have permissions period to read the entire current wifi state.
iOS doesn't allow some of these permissions too. Like sending SMSes. iOS will give you a remote view controller that you can pre-populate with SMS data, but will not automatically send SMS programatically. So writing SMSes just isn't a permission it needs to specify.
So iOS doesn't need the fine granular controls that Android folks are looking for, but everything that wants to access personal data on the phone either does so through explicit user prompts or remote view controllers.
Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
I don't pick up my Android phone or tablet and think "boy, if it only had this feature that iOS has, it would be a complete device".
Whenever I use an iOS app I always wonder how do I go back to the previous screen.
I am becoming gerund, destroyer of verbs.
kio-mtp
make sure usb debugging is disabled under developer options, that stumped me for a while
Yeah well with Android you don't have to use a hacking tool like this "Lunix" thing, it just works with ALL platforms, including 7, XP, and 98.
What was the last version of Android that actually let you do that?
Lollipop.
Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
Next release of android will remove that feature by default because it will enable encryption by default. You will need special software on the computer and a key (which is buried in the phone somehow) to view the files.
This is incorrect.
It would be correct if Android still supported USB Mass Storage, but thanks to the switch from UMS to MTP back in JellyBean days (IIRC), you're now relying on the operating system to read the file system, and it knows how to transparently decrypt things.
Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
Please tell me where I can prioritize between different wifi SSIDs in iOS. Also, please tell me where I can see which 802.11 standard a given network is running, which frequency it's on and which type of encryption it's using. And please tell me how to access a proper file system on an iOS device, so I can choose for myself which files I am "allowed" to download and where to put them.
IOS is way too simplistic for any kind of serious usage.
Eat the rich.
Yes, annoyingly, OSX doesn't support MTP. You'll have to use something like Android File Transfer.
Copy and paste. Copy and paste is utter pain in the arse to perform on Android. Try it. Works sporadically and only partially on apps. e.g. Try copying and pasting to/from Android Chrome browser for Google Translate.
If you want this on OSX (or windows?) you could install ifuse: https://github.com/libimobiled... . . Not sure how to get it to mount a automatically when the device is plugged in though.
If it acquires resources on instantiation like a duck, then its a shared_ptr<Duck>
These are the settings that you are looking for.
Just buy a phone with this installed.
That's ironic, since people totally made fun of how iOS didn't have copy/paste for a while.