Google Rolls Out Threadit That Lets Users Record and Send TikTok-Like Short Videos for Work

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Google has launched a new tool Threadit, to lets users record short videos like in TikTok or Snapchat, that is shareable with colleagues to discuss work. The software giant says that the recorded-short video allows users to communicate without scheduling meetings or quickly summarise lengthy information. Threadit is available to download from the browser or as a Chrome extension, and the video can be shared in an email or chat. Google states that this helps in “reducing unnecessary meetings while still becoming a tighter-knit team.” To use the tool, users would need to speak straight to the camera or share the screen. Users  can also record multiple short clips that would get stitched together into one cohesive video message.

As expected anyone can reply with their own video message when they are ready. Speaking more over the development, Keller Smith, General Manager at Threadit says, “I would send a Threadit to my colleagues in Japan during my normal working hours in Seattle; they’d respond during the hours that worked for them in Tokyo. Threadit helped us feel like we were working together in person, even though we were responding at different times from across the world.” Similarly, it seems that users can already record short clips and send them to others via channels such as WhatsApp or even via email. The makers of the tool note that since Threadit comes as a browser extension, it is all a matter of convenience.

In case users use the Chrome extension, they can record clips or anything on the screen at any time, even from within Gmail. It is shareable via a link. The latest tool has been built by a team at Area 120, Google’s incubator division, with the aim to make remote working more competent.

[ad_2]

READ FULL ARTICLE HERE

Google Chrome: New Chrome to use lesser memory, claims Google – Times of India

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Tech giant Google has claimed that its newly launched Chrome version M89 can help save memory in Windows devices, “up to 22% in the browser process, 8% in the renderer, and 3% in the GPU”. The company also said that with the new Chrome, browser responsiveness has been upped by 9% with the help of its own memory allocator called PartitionAlloc.
Google also said that in addition to using memory smartly, the new version is now more efficient at discarding it well. “Chrome now reclaims up to 100MiB per tab, which is more than 20% on some popular sites, by discarding memory that the foreground tab is not actively using, such as big images you’ve scrolled off screen. Chrome is also shrinking its memory footprint in background tabs on macOS, something we’ve been doing on other platforms for a while. We’re seeing up to 8% memory savings, which is more than 1GiB in some cases!”, said Google in a blogpost.
The latest Android devices (Android Q+ and 8GB+ of RAM) will have Chrome that’s 64-bit binary, which is claimed to load pages up to 8.5% faster and make scrolling 28% smoother.
Another new feature is the Freeze-dried Tabs on Android, designed and implemented to make Android start up faster. Google Chrome will now use this feature– essentially a saved version of tabs that support scrolling, zooming and tapping on links, and have sizes close to that of screenshot — while the actual tab is loading in the background to load up pages faster.

[ad_2]

READ FULL ARTICLE HERE

Microsoft Catches Up to Google, Announces New 4-Week Update Cycle For Microsoft Edge

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Google recently announced plans to release major updates for Chrome every four weeks, going away from the web browser’s current 6 weeks timeline. Now Google’s competitor Microsoft has announced that it will also push updates for its Microsoft Edge browser every four weeks.

Microsoft has said that the change in the updates cycle will come into effect starting with Edge 94, scheduled to be released in September this year. Google, on the other hand, said that it will start the new cycle starting with Chrome 94, which is scheduled to release in Q3 2021. In a blog post, Microsoft said that it will offer an extended timeline to manage updates for its enterprise customers who need an extended timeline to manage updates. Microsoft Edge will offer an Extended Stable option with a longer, 8-week major release cycle; this option will only be available for customers with managed environments, Microsoft said.

Enterprise customers who don’t opt for the 8-week extended cycle will be automatically switched to the new 4-week cycle. Those who opt for the 8-week will get the same new features and security from the 4-week cycle, just at a slower pace.

According to Microsoft’s current roadmap for the Edge browser, the next big update is scheduled for March 15, followed by another update on April 27, which is six weeks later.

[ad_2]

READ FULL ARTICLE HERE