Article 5QMT0 Google TV features finally make sense with new multi-user support

Google TV features finally make sense with new multi-user support

by
Ron Amadeo
from Ars Technica - All content on (#5QMT0)
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After launching in October of last year, Google TV is finally getting one of its most requested features: multi-user profile support.

Google TV is a revamp and rebranding of Google's Android TV OS-it's Android, but tweaked for televisions with a big-screen UI. Currently, there are still some Android TV boxes on the market, but Google reportedly plans to phase out the "Android TV" brand by 2022, in favor of using Google TV branding everywhere. Google TV is the next version of Android TV.

Google TV's flagship feature is the new home screen, which is designed around a content-recommendation engine. Instead of the usual grid of streaming app icons, Google TV displays the shows themselves on the home screen, prioritizing what matters-the content-and deprioritizing which service it comes from. The problem with Google TV's recommendation approach is that the system has gone a full year without profile support, so every user of the TV affects the single list of recommended content.

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