This week Google announced Gemini for Messenger alongside plenty of other news. It was a good week for Android apps.
Welcome to the 523rd edition of Android Apps Weekly, where we discuss the latest in mobile news and take a closer look at some of the most interesting new apps and games. Let’s jump right in and take a look at some of the biggest highlights from the last week:
The biggest app news this week happened at MWC, with Google announcing plenty of significant app-related features and changes. Not only is Google Messages getting Gemini access, but Android Auto will get AI text summaries. Additionally, Google Docs will soon allow you to add handwritten annotations to documents using a stylus or finger, among other updates.
New apps and games launch all the time but how often do they really change the game much? We can’t speak for all apps, but Whispp at least delivers something new and truly useful. The app promises to give a voice to people with speaking disabilities by either boosting a person’s current voice or by recreating your original. The app uses recordings of your own voice from the past in order to do the latter.
Whatsapp is adding a new way to search with its “search by date” feature, which will let you search by date for individual and group chats. The news comes by word of Meta CEO Mark Zuckeberg, which first announced the news on the Whatsapp Channel.
The latest Google Play Services update includes a new password-sharing function that is currently not enabled, though TheSpAndroid has managed to activate the feature with a feature flag. The feature could eventually allow accounts within a family group to share usernames and passwords easily with Password Manager.
It’s not just Google Play that has hints of future features, as Google contacts also contains code for a currently inaccessible feature: a new UI for the header area in the contacts screen that would let you quickly look at your most recent messages and more.
Photomath is one of the most popular apps for solving math problems using AI, requiring only a simple picture to get started. Now, Google has acquired ownership of the app, officially adding it to the Google fold.