Your Chromebook Can Stream Apps From Your Android Phone
Google has been working to integrate Chromebooks more closely with Android phones over the past few years. Now you can even see your apps on your phone… on your Chromebook.
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You won’t have to install Android apps on your Chromebook when you need them in a pinch. After a preview at CES last year, Google has enabled app streaming through Phone Hub in Chrome OS Beta. You can quickly check your messages, or track the status of a food order without having to sign in again.
Once Phone Hub is enabled, you can stream apps by either clicking a messaging app notification or browsing the Hub’s Recent Apps section after you’ve opened a given app on your phone. Google doesn’t describe certain app types as off-limits, although it’s safe to say that you won’t want to play action games this way.
The feature works with “select” phones running Android 13 or newer. The Chromebook and handset need to be on the same WiFi network and physically close-by, although you can use the phone as a hotspot through Instant Tethering if necessary.
Google is ultimately mirroring the remote Android app access you’ve had in Windows for years. However, the functionality might be more useful on Chromebooks. While app streaming won’t replace native apps, it can save precious storage space and spare you from having to jump between devices just to complete certain tasks. This approach is also more manufacturer-independent where Microsoft’s approach is restricted to Samsung and Honor phones.
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This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/you-can-now-stream-android-phone-apps-to-your-chromebook-202830500.html?src=rss
Google is adding new systemwide camera and microphone access toggles in ChromeOS settings that can instantly block all apps and sites from being able to use them.
The new systemwide privacy controls cut off the rest of the computer’s access to the hardware, which, for all intents and purposes, is a software replacement to the physical camera and mic kill switch one can find on various PC laptops.
But instead of adding hardware switches that cut power to the camera, like on Framework’s Chromebook or even a simple plastic sliding gate that obscures the lens, Chromebook manufacturers can simplify the laptop design and use the built-in ChromeOS solution instead. Of course, there’s nothing more secure than a full-on severance of power to the…
“The 31 million Chromebooks sold globally in the first year of the pandemic represent approximately 9 million tons of CO2e emissions,” the report says. “Doubling the life of just Chromebooks sold in 2020 could cut emissions equivalent to taking 900,000 cars off the road for a year, more than the number of cars registered in Mississippi.” The report says that excluding additional maintenance costs, longer lasting Chromebooks could save taxpayers as much as $1.8 billion dollars in hardware replacement expenses.
The US PIRG said it wants: Google to extend its ChromeOS update policy beyond current device expiration dates; hardware makers to make parts more available so their devices can be repaired; and hardware designs that enable easier part replacement and service. […] According to US PIRG, making an average laptop releases 580 pounds of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, amounting to 77 percent of the total carbon impact of the device during its lifetime. Thus, the 31 million Chromebooks sold during the first year of the pandemic represent about 8.9 million tons of CO2e emissions. “We think that Google should extend the automatic update expiration to 10 years after launch date,” said Lucas Gutterman, who leads US PIRG’s Designed to Last campaign. “There’s just no reason why we should be throwing away a computer that still is otherwise functional just because it passes a certain date.”
“We’re asking Google to use their leadership among the OEMs to design the devices to last, to make some of the changes that we list, to have them be more easily repairable by actually producing spare parts that folks can buy at reasonable prices,” he added. “And to design with modularity and repair in mind, so that you can, for example, use the plastic bezel on one Chromebook on the next version, rather than having to buy a whole new set of spare parts just because a clip has changed.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.