Skip to main content

Google rolls out lightweight keyboard app to low-RAM Android devices

Google has slowly but surely been introducing “Go” versions of its apps to phones that lack the processing prowess to handle its full offerings. The latest of these? Apparently, it’s Gboard. According to a report from Android Police, Google is currently rolling out a lightweight version called Gboard Go to phones with low RAM that run Android 8.1 or later.

Gboard Go is pretty much the same as the standard version, and installs right over the top on phones that could work better with it. It is missing a few features — like the ability to search for GIFs and send stickers — though that may not be a big deal for those who don’t use those features all that often. It also seems as though one-handed typing is not possible on Gboard Go. The real advantage to the keyboard is how little RAM it uses — according to reports, it only takes up 40MB, instead of the standard 70MB.

Recommended Videos

So how can you get your hands on it yourself? Well, it’s simple to install on phones with limited RAM — and if you don’t have limited RAM, we don’t see any reason you would want it in the first place. You also need to have Android 8.1 or later to use it, so it’s pretty much limited to Pixel and Nexus phones.

Of course, this isn’t the first “Go” release we’ve seen from Google. The company launched the file management service Files Go toward the end of last year, as a way to easily clean up extra files and save space on your phone. It has also launched YouTube Go, which is only available in select countries and is basically aimed at bringing YouTube to phones with limited processing power and slower internet connections. Then there’s Maps Go, which is also aimed at devices with between 512MB and 1GB of RAM and limited internet connections.

Google has even launched a lightweight version of Android, called Android Go, which is a super-slimmed-down operating system that cuts back on things like animations and a complex user interface to ultimately take up far less space and RAM.

Christian de Looper
Christian de Looper is a long-time freelance writer who has covered every facet of the consumer tech and electric vehicle…
A native Android Apple TV app is now in the Google Play store
The Apple TV app on a Samsung Android phone.

It's been five years since the Apple TV app was launched, and we're now getting a version for Android devices -- built from the ground up for native Android integration -- in the Google Play store that will have the same Apple TV+ functionality as the Apple ecosystem version. The new app means users with Android OS 10 or later will finally have the ability to sign up for Apple TV+ on their Android-based phones and tablets to watch shows and movies like Severance, Silo, Killers of the Flower Moon, and CODA. There will be no difference in pricing on Android compared to Apple.

This should enable seamless interactivity across platforms for features such as Continue Watching -- which keeps track of where you are in a show or movie and allows you to pick up from that spot when you return, regardless of the device you watch on. Customer's Watchlist will be kept up to date across devices as well, and since purchases are linked to your Apple account, all the content you own will be accessible on any device with the new updated app. One thing missing at launch, though, will be the ability to cast Apple TV content from your Android device.

Read more
These dedicated Google Assistant car mics might be on the way out
Android Auto

If you interact with Google Assistant through the JBL Link Drive or Anker Roav Bolt, we have bad news: the microphones might be shutting down soon, if the code found in the Google app beta is any indication. The folks at 9to5Google stumbled across the code strings in an APK teardown that provided insight into the future of Google Assistant in cars.

The string is titled "assistant_car_accessory_deprecation" and reads: "By the way, Google Assistant on your car accessory will be discontinued in coming weeks. To keep using Assistant, invoke queries either on your Mobile or via Android Auto." These accessories originally came out in 2019 as a way for drivers with older vehicles to use Google Assistant, so even the oldest adopters would have only had these for six years.

Read more
You can officially download the TikTok app again on Android phones
Download page for TikTok app on Android in the US.

The TikTok app has not returned to the Google Play Store or Apple’s App Store, ever since it went dark in the US with a ban looming over its head. That means fresh downloads are not possible on Android and Apple smartphones. Things have finally eased, at least for Android fans.

The official TikTok website now lists the software package that lets users download the app directly, instead of an app repository such as the Google Play Store. Third-party websites have hosted the app's software bundle for a while, but that route usually comes with the risk of malware.

Read more