This article was published on May 7, 2014

Google updates Play services with Street View imagery, running and walking detectors, promo ads, and more


Google updates Play services with Street View imagery, running and walking detectors, promo ads, and more

Google today updated Google Play Services to version 4.4, adding Street View imagery, running and walking detectors, as well as several new features in Games Services, Mobile Ads, and Wallet. The new version is rolling out worldwide now; once it’s available in your region, you’ll be able to download it directly from Google Play.

Once it becomes available to all Android users (Google expects the process will “take several days”), developers will be able to download the SDK using the Android SDK manager and get started with the new APIs. The biggest addition they’ll likely want to play with is in the Google Maps Android API: Street View support.

Developers can embed Street View imagery into an activity, letting their users explore the world through panoramic 360-degree views. The zoom and orientation (tilt and bearing) of the Street View camera can be controlled programmatically, and the camera movements can be animated over a given duration.

street-n7

The <3 of EU tech

The latest rumblings from the EU tech scene, a story from our wise ol' founder Boris, and some questionable AI art. It's free, every week, in your inbox. Sign up now!

The Indoor Maps feature of the API has also been expanded. You can now turn the default floor picker off, detect when a new building comes into focus, and find the currently-active building and floor.

Likely in anticipation of Android Wear, the Location API has gained new activity detectors: running and walking. This is in addition to being able to detect if the device is in a vehicle, on a bicycle, on foot, still, or tilting.

Next up, in Games Services the default requests sending UI has been extended to allow the user to select multiple Game Gifts recipients. Google hopes this will lead to more collaboration and social engagement between players.

The Mobile Ads section has gained new APIs for publishers to display in-app promo ads, which let users purchase advertised items directly. App developers can target specific user segments with ads – the hope being that users will be more likely to purchase in-app items directly if they are tailored (high-value users get an ad for product A, new users get an ad for product B, and so on).

Finally, the Instant Buy API has gained a new WalletFragment API that makes it even easier to add a Buy With Google button into an app. Google’s payment system is still very new, and the company is trying to figure out how best to get developers using it as much as possible.

None of these features are major additions, but they certainly do add up. That being said, we can’t wait to see what comes out of the Street View imagery integration.

Top Image Credit: Kimihiro Hoshino/Getty Images

Get the TNW newsletter

Get the most important tech news in your inbox each week.

Also tagged with