Google Gesture Search Now On Nexus 7 With Better UI - Sketch Your Search Terms, Anyone?

Google's app for Gesture Search got a recent update making it available to the Android tablets including the Google's very own Nexus 7. For those who haven't yet got their hands on this app, here's a little introduction. Google Gesture Search app lets you search or access different elements of your Android phone or tablet by simply sketching the letters or numbers on the screen. Using such gestures, you can look for things in apps, contacts (even without phone numbers), media files, settings or even bookmarks. The app is smart too - It will continuously refine search results as you add each gesture, and will become better as it learns from your search history.

With the updated app now available on #-Link-Snipped-#, you get to see some improvements in the UI and a faster search performance. Now along with English, users will be able to search in multiple languages, that includes - Simplified Chinese, Dutch, French, German, Italian, Polish, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, and Turkish.

#-Link-Snipped-#

#-Link-Snipped-#

The image above will give you an idea of how the gesture search works. With an average rating of 4.5, the app sure is popular among the Android user community already. More useful on a tablet than a smartphone, this app has also garnered some good reviews. Download the app and let us know what you think.

Via: Google Gesture Search Updated - Works on Nexus 7, UI Improvements, and Faster Performance

Replies

You are reading an archived discussion.

Related Posts

Microsoft will officially launch the Windows 8 on October 25 and the engineers working on Firefox at Mozilla Inc. are surely getting busier than ever before. Brian Bondy of Mozilla...
With NASA's growing ambitions to conquer the space and all the planets out there, engineers are looking to develop newer and better methods of making the capsules land anywhere on...
Apple has silently released a new supplemental update to the OSX 10.8.1, and calls it version 1.0. We think most of you won't really need it, but it's better to...
Rheometer is one of the commonly used device in laboratories to measure how a liquid, suspension or slurry flow under applied forces, mostly used for the fluids that can't be...
General Electric has announced plans to develop better sensing capabilities for the underground CO2 storage wells. The aim of these new sensors will be to detect the pressure and temperature...