google tv https://theinshotproapk.com/category/app/google-tv/ Download InShot Pro APK for Android, iOS, and PC Thu, 21 Aug 2025 21:30:00 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://theinshotproapk.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/cropped-Inshot-Pro-APK-Logo-1-32x32.png google tv https://theinshotproapk.com/category/app/google-tv/ 32 32 64-bit app compatibility for Google TV and Android TV https://theinshotproapk.com/64-bit-app-compatibility-for-google-tv-and-android-tv/ Thu, 21 Aug 2025 21:30:00 +0000 https://theinshotproapk.com/64-bit-app-compatibility-for-google-tv-and-android-tv/ Posted by Fahad Durrani Product Management, Google TV Google TV and Android TV will require 64-bit app compatibility to support ...

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Posted by Fahad Durrani Product Management, Google TV

Google TV and Android TV will require 64-bit app compatibility to support upcoming 64-bit TV devices starting August 2026.

Following other Android form factors, Google TV and Android TV devices will soon support 64-bit app compatibility. 64-bit apps will offer improved performance, shorter start times, and new viewing experiences on upcoming 64-bit Google TV and Android TV devices.

Starting August 1st, 2026:

We’re not making any changes to 32-bit support, and Google Play will continue to deliver apps to 32-bit devices. The 64-bit requirement means that apps with 32-bit native code will need a 64-bit version as well. You should continue to provide 32-bit binaries alongside 64-bit binaries by using ABI splits in App Bundles.

How to transition

This requirement only impacts apps that utilize native code. You can check if your app has native code (.so files) with the APK Analyzer. For ARM devices, you can find native libraries in lib/armeabi-v7a (32-bit) or lib/arm64-v8a (64-bit).

For detailed guidance on transitioning to 64-bit, see Support 64-bit architectures.

How to test

    • The Google TV emulator image for macOS devices with Apple Silicon is configured for a 64-bit userspace and may be used for app testing and verification.
    • The Nvidia Shield (models P2571, P2897 and P2897) have both 32-bit and 64-bit userspace compatibility and may be used for testing on physical hardware. If your app contains 64-bit libraries, they will be used automatically.
    • 64-bit TV apps may be sideloaded to Pixel (7 or newer) phones after constraining the view window to TV resolution and DPI:
        • adb shell wm size 1080×1920
          adb shell wm density 231 #tvdpi
          adb install <package.apk>

Next steps

Prepare your TV apps to comply with 64-bit requirements by August 1st, 2026:

  1. Use the APK Analyzer to check if your app has native code.
  2. Update your native code to support 64-bit and 16 KB memory page size.
  3. Test and verify that your changes work as intended.
  4. Submit your app update to Google Play.

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Engage users on Google TV with excellent TV apps https://theinshotproapk.com/engage-users-on-google-tv-with-excellent-tv-apps/ Mon, 02 Jun 2025 12:01:33 +0000 https://theinshotproapk.com/engage-users-on-google-tv-with-excellent-tv-apps/ Posted by Shobana Radhakrishnan – Senior Director of Engineering, Google TV, and Paul Lammertsma – Developer Relations Engineer, Android Over ...

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Posted by Shobana Radhakrishnan – Senior Director of Engineering, Google TV, and Paul Lammertsma – Developer Relations Engineer, Android

Over the past year, Google TV and Android TV achieved over 270 million monthly active devices, establishing one of the largest smart TV OS footprints. Building on this momentum, we are excited to share new platform features and developer tools designed to help you increase app engagement with our expanding user base.

Google TV with Gemini capabilities

Earlier this year, we announced that we’ll bring Gemini capabilities to Google TV, so users can speak more naturally and conversationally to find what to watch and get answers to complex questions.

A user pulls up Gemini on a TV asking for kid-friendly movie recommendations similar to Jurassic Park. Gemini responds with several movie recommendations

After each movie or show search, our new voice assistant will suggest relevant content from your apps, significantly increasing the discoverability of your content.

A user pulls up Gemini on a TV asking for help explaining the solar system to a first grader. Gemini responds with YouTube videos to help explain the solar system

Plus, users can easily ask questions about topics they’re curious about and receive insightful answers with supporting videos.

We’re so excited to bring this helpful and delightful experience to users this fall.

Video Discovery API

Today, we’ve also opened partner enrollment for our Video Discovery API.

Video Discovery optimizes Resumption, Entitlements, and Recommendations across all Google TV form factors to enhance the end-user experience and boost app engagement.

    • Resumption: Partners can now easily display a user’s paused video within the ‘Continue Watching’ row from the home screen. This row is a prime location that drives 60% of all user interactions on Google TV.
    • Entitlements: Video Discovery streamlines entitlement management, which matches app content to user eligibility. Users appreciate this because they can enjoy personalized recommendations without needing to manually update all their subscription details. This allows partners to connect with users across multiple discovery points on Google TV.
    • Recommendations: Video Discovery even highlights personalized content recommendations based on content that users watched inside apps.

Partners can begin incorporating the Video Discovery API today, starting with resumption and entitlement integrations. Check out g.co/tv/vda to learn more.

Jetpack Compose for TV

Compose for TV 1.0 expands on the core and Material Compose libraries

Last year, we launched Compose for TV 1.0 beta, which lets you build beautiful, adaptive UIs across Android, including Android TV OS.

Now, Compose for TV 1.0 is stable, and expands on the core and Material Compose libraries. We’ve even seen how the latest release of Compose significantly improves app startup within our internal benchmarking mobile sample, with roughly a 20% improvement compared with the March 2024 release. Because Compose for TV builds upon these libraries, apps built with Compose for TV should also see better app startup times.

New to building with Compose, and not sure where to start? Our updated Jetcaster audio streaming app sample demonstrates how to use Compose across form factors. It includes a dedicated module for playing podcasts on TV by combining separate view models with shared business logic.

Focus Management Codelab

We understand that focus management can be challenging at times. That’s why we’ve published a codelab that reviews how to set initial focus, prepare for unexpected focus traversal, and efficiently restore focus.

Memory Optimization Guide

We’ve released a comprehensive guide on memory optimization, including memory targets for low RAM devices as well. Combined with Android Studio’s powerful memory profiler, this helps you understand when your app exceeds those limits and why.

In-App Ratings and Reviews

Ratings and reviews entry point forJetStream sample app on TV

Moreover, app ratings and reviews are essential for developers, offering quantitative and qualitative feedback on user experiences. Now, we’re extending the In-App Ratings and Reviews API to TV to allow developers to prompt users for ratings and reviews directly from Google TV. Check out our recent blog post detailing how to easily integrate the In-App Ratings and Reviews API.

Android 16 for TV

Android 16 for TV

We’re excited to announce the upcoming release of Android 16 for TV. Developers can begin using the latest Emulator today. With Android 16, TV developers can access several great features:

    • Platform support for the Eclipsa Audio codec enables creators to use the IAMF spatial audio format. For ExoPlayer support that includes previous platform versions, see ExoPlayer’s IAMF decoder module.
    • There are various improvements to media playback speed, consistency and efficiency, as well as HDMI-CEC reliability and performance optimizations for 64-bit kernels.
    • Additional APIs and user experiences from Android 16 are also available. We invite you to explore the complete list from the Android 16 for TV release notes.

What’s next

We’re incredibly excited to see how these announcements will optimize your development journey, and look forward to seeing the fantastic apps you’ll launch on the platform!

Explore this announcement and all Google I/O 2025 updates on io.google starting May 22.

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In-App Ratings and Reviews for TV https://theinshotproapk.com/in-app-ratings-and-reviews-for-tv/ Sun, 01 Jun 2025 12:04:39 +0000 https://theinshotproapk.com/in-app-ratings-and-reviews-for-tv/ Posted by Paul Lammertsma – Developer Relations Engineer Ratings and reviews are essential for developers, offering quantitative and qualitative feedback ...

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Posted by Paul Lammertsma – Developer Relations Engineer

Ratings and reviews are essential for developers, offering quantitative and qualitative feedback on user experiences. In 2022, we enhanced the granularity of this feedback by segmenting these insights by countries and form factors.

Now, we’re extending the In-App Ratings and Reviews API to TV to allow developers to prompt users for ratings and reviews directly from Google TV.

Ratings and reviews on Google TV

Ratings and reviews entry point forJetStream sample app on TV

Users can now see rating averages, browse reviews, and leave their own review directly from an app’s store listing on Google TV.

Ratings and written reviews input screen on TV

Users can interact with in-app ratings and reviews on their TVs by doing the following:

    • Select ratings using the remote control D-pad.
    • Provide optional written reviews using Gboard’s on-screen voice input, or by easily typing from their phone.
    • Send mobile notifications to themselves to complete their TV app review directly on their phone.

User instructions for submitting TV app ratings and reviews on mobile

Additionally, users can leave reviews for other form factors directly from their phone by simply selecting the device chip when submitting an app rating or writing a review.

We’ve already seen a considerable lift in app ratings on TV since bringing these changes to Google TV, and now, we’re making it possible for developers to trigger a ratings prompt as well.

Before we look at the integration, let’s first carefully consider the best time to request a review prompt. First, identify optimal moments within your app to request user feedback, ensuring prompts appear only when the UI is idle to prevent interruption of ongoing content.

In-App Review API

Integrating the Google Play In-App Review API is the same as on mobile and it’s only a couple of method calls:

val manager = ReviewManagerFactory.create(context)
manager.requestReviewFlow().addOnCompleteListener { task ->
    if (task.isSuccessful) {
        // We got the ReviewInfo object
        val reviewInfo = task.result
        manager.launchReviewFlow(activity, reviewInfo)
    } else {
        // There was some problem, log or handle the error code
        @ReviewErrorCode val reviewErrorCode =
            (task.getException() as ReviewException).errorCode
    }
}

First, invoke requestReviewFlow() to obtain a ReviewInfo object which is used to launch the review flow. You must include an addOnCompleteListener() not just to obtain the ReviewInfo object, but also to monitor for any problems triggering this flow, such as the unavailability of Google Play on the device. Note that ReviewInfo does not offer any insights on whether or not a prompt appeared or which action the user took if a prompt did appear.

The challenge is to identify when to trigger launchReviewFlow(). Track user actions—identifying successful journeys and points where users encounter issues—so you can be confident they had a delightful experience in your app.

For this method, you may optionally also include an addOnCompleteListener() to ensure it resumes when the returned task is completed.

Note that due to throttling of how often users are presented with this prompt, there are no guarantees that the ratings dialog will appear when requesting to start this flow. For best practices, check this guide on when to request an in-app review.

Get started with In-App Reviews on Google TV

You can get a head start today by following these steps:

    1. Identify successful journeys for users, like finishing a movie or TV show season.
    2. Identify poor experiences that should be avoided, like buffering or playback errors.
    3. Integrate the Google Play In-App Review API to trigger review requests at optimal moments within the user journey.
    4. Test your integration by following the testing guide.
    5. Publish your app and continuously monitor your ratings by device type in the Play Console.

    We’re confident this integration enables you to elevate your Google TV app ratings and empowers your users to share valuable feedback.

    Play Console Ratings graphic

    Resources

    Explore this announcement and all Google I/O 2025 updates on io.google starting May 22.

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    16 things to know for Android developers at Google I/O 2025 https://theinshotproapk.com/16-things-to-know-for-android-developers-at-google-i-o-2025/ Tue, 20 May 2025 18:03:00 +0000 https://theinshotproapk.com/16-things-to-know-for-android-developers-at-google-i-o-2025/ Posted by Matthew McCullough – VP of Product Management, Android Developer Today at Google I/O, we announced the many ways ...

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    Posted by Matthew McCullough – VP of Product Management, Android Developer

    Today at Google I/O, we announced the many ways we’re helping you build excellent, adaptive experiences, and helping you stay more productive through updates to our tooling that put AI at your fingertips and throughout your development lifecycle. Here’s a recap of 16 of our favorite announcements for Android developers; you can also see what was announced last week in The Android Show: I/O Edition. And stay tuned over the next two days as we dive into all of the topics in more detail!

    Building AI into your Apps

    1: Building intelligent apps with Generative AI

    Generative AI enhances apps’ experience by making them intelligent, personalized and agentic. This year, we announced new ML Kit GenAI APIs using Gemini Nano for common on-device tasks like summarization, proofreading, rewrite, and image description. We also provided capabilities for developers to harness more powerful models such as Gemini Pro, Gemini Flash, and Imagen via Firebase AI Logic for more complex use cases like image generation and processing extensive data across modalities, including bringing AI to life in Android XR, and a new AI sample app, Androidify, that showcases how these APIs can transform your selfies into unique Android robots! To start building intelligent experiences by leveraging these new capabilities, explore the developer documentation, sample apps, and watch the overview session to choose the right solution for your app.

    New experiences across devices

    2: One app, every screen: think adaptive and unlock 500 million screens

    Mobile Android apps form the foundation across phones, foldables, tablets and ChromeOS, and this year we’re helping you bring them to cars and XR and expanding usages with desktop windowing and connected displays. This expansion means tapping into an ecosystem of 500 million devices – a significant opportunity to engage more users when you think adaptive, building a single mobile app that works across form factors. Resources, including Compose Layouts library and Jetpack Navigation updates, help make building these dynamic experiences easier than before. You can see how Peacock, NBCUniveral’s streaming service (available in the US) is building adaptively to meet users where they are.

    Disclaimer: Peacock is available in the US only. This video will only be viewable to US viewers.

    3: Material 3 Expressive: design for intuition and emotion

    The new Material 3 Expressive update provides tools to enhance your product’s appeal by harnessing emotional UX, making it more engaging, intuitive, and desirable for users. Check out the I/O talk to learn more about expressive design and how it inspires emotion, clearly guides users toward their goals, and offers a flexible and personalized experience.

    moving image of Material 3 Expressive demo

    4: Smarter widgets, engaging live updates

    Measure the return on investment of your widgets (available soon) and easily create personalized widget previews with Glance 1.2. Promoted Live Updates notify users of important ongoing notifications and come with a new Progress Style standardized template.

    moving image of Material 3 Expressive demo

    5: Enhanced Camera & Media: low light boost and battery savings

    This year’s I/O introduces several camera and media enhancements. These include a software low light boost for improved photography in dim lighting and native PCM offload, allowing the DSP to handle more audio playback processing, thus conserving user battery. Explore our detailed sessions on built-in effects within CameraX and Media3 for further information.

    6: Build next-gen app experiences for Cars

    We’re launching expanded opportunities for developers to build in-car experiences, including new Gemini integrations, support for more app categories like Games and Video, and enhanced capabilities for media and communication apps via the Car App Library and new APIs. Alongside updated car app quality tiers and simplified distribution, we’ll soon be providing improved testing tools like Android Automotive OS on Pixel Tablet and Firebase Test Lab access to help you bring your innovative apps to cars. Learn more from our technical session and blog post on new in-car app experiences.

    7: Build for Android XR’s expanding ecosystem with Developer Preview 2 of the SDK

    We announced Android XR in December, and today at Google I/O we shared a bunch of updates coming to the platform including Developer Preview 2 of the Android XR SDK plus an expanding ecosystem of devices: in addition to the first Android XR headset, Samsung’s Project Moohan, you’ll also see more devices including a new portable Android XR device from our partners at XREAL. There’s lots more to cover for Android XR: Watch the Compose and AI on Android XR session, and the Building differentiated apps for Android XR with 3D content session, and learn more about building for Android XR.

    product image of XREAL’s Project Aura against a nebulous black background

    XREAL’s Project Aura

    8: Express yourself on Wear OS: meet Material Expressive on Wear OS 6

    This year we are launching Wear OS 6: the most powerful and expressive version of Wear OS. Wear OS 6 features Material 3 Expressive, a new UI design with personalized visuals and motion for user creativity, coming to Wear, Android, and Google apps later this year. Developers gain access to Material 3 Expressive on Wear OS by utilizing new Jetpack libraries: Wear Compose Material 3, which provides components for apps and Wear ProtoLayout Material 3 which provides components and layouts for tiles. Get started with Material 3 libraries and other updates on Wear.

    moving image displays examples of Material 3 Expressive on Wear OS experiences

    Some examples of Material 3 Expressive on Wear OS experiences

    9: Engage users on Google TV with excellent TV apps

    You can leverage more resources within Compose’s core and Material libraries with the stable release of Compose for TV, empowering you to build excellent adaptive UIs across your apps. We’re also thrilled to share exciting platform updates and developer tools designed to boost app engagement, including bringing Gemini capabilities to TV in the fall, opening enrollment for our Video Discovery API, and more.

    Developer productivity

    10: Build beautiful apps faster with Jetpack Compose

    Compose is our big bet for UI development. The latest stable BOM release provides the features, performance, stability, and libraries that you need to build beautiful adaptive apps faster, so you can focus on what makes your app valuable to users.

    moving image of compose adaptive layouts updates in the Google Play app

    Compose Adaptive Layouts Updates in the Google Play app

    11: Kotlin Multiplatform: new Shared Template lets you build across platforms, easily

    Kotlin Multiplatform (KMP) enables teams to reach new audiences across Android and iOS with less development time. We’ve released a new Android Studio KMP shared module template, updated Jetpack libraries and new codelabs (Getting started with Kotlin Multiplatform and Migrating your Room database to KMP) to help developers who are looking to get started with KMP. Shared module templates make it easier for developers to craft, maintain, and own the business logic. Read more on what’s new in Android’s Kotlin Multiplatform.

    12: Gemini in Android Studio: AI Agents to help you work

    Gemini in Android Studio is the AI-powered coding companion that makes Android developers more productive at every stage of the dev lifecycle. In March, we introduced Image to Code to bridge the gap between UX teams and software engineers by intelligently converting design mockups into working Compose UI code. And today, we previewed new agentic AI experiences, Journeys for Android Studio and Version Upgrade Agent. These innovations make it easier to build and test code. You can read more about these updates in What’s new in Android development tools.

    13: Android Studio: smarter with Gemini

    In this latest release, we’re empowering devs with AI-driven tools like Gemini in Android Studio, streamlining UI creation, making testing easier, and ensuring apps are future-proofed in our ever-evolving Android ecosystem. These innovations accelerate development cycles, improve app quality, and help you stay ahead in a dynamic mobile landscape. To take advantage, upgrade to the latest Studio release. You can read more about these innovations in What’s new in Android development tools.

    moving image of Gemini in Android Studio Agentic Experiences including Journeys and Version Upgrade

    And the latest on driving business growth

    14: What’s new in Google Play

    Get ready for exciting updates from Play designed to boost your discovery, engagement and revenue! Learn how we’re continuing to become a content-rich destination with enhanced personalization and fresh ways to showcase your apps and content. Plus, explore powerful new subscription features designed to streamline checkout and reduce churn. Read I/O 2025: What’s new in Google Play to learn more.

    a moving image of three mobile devices displaying how content is displayed on the Play Store

    15: Start migrating to Play Games Services v2 today

    Play Games Services (PGS) connects over 2 billion gamer profiles on Play, powering cross-device gameplay, personalized gaming content and rewards for your players throughout the gaming journey. We are moving PGS v1 features to v2 with more advanced features and an easier integration path. Learn more about the migration timeline and new features.

    16: And of course, Android 16

    We unpacked some of the latest features coming to users in Android 16, which we’ve been previewing with you for the last few months. If you haven’t already, make sure to test your apps with the latest Beta of Android 16. Android 16 includes Live Updates, professional media and camera features, desktop windowing and connected displays, major accessibility enhancements and much more.

    Check out all of the Android and Play content at Google I/O

    This was just a preview of some of the cool updates for Android developers at Google I/O, but stay tuned to Google I/O over the next two days as we dive into a range of Android developer topics in more detail. You can check out the What’s New in Android and the full Android track of sessions, and whether you’re joining in person or around the world, we can’t wait to engage with you!

    Explore this announcement and all Google I/O 2025 updates on io.google starting May 22.

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