Tag Archives: store

How to access the full Play Store on the Chromecast with Google TV

Google TV, the new software layer on top of Android TV, introduced a whole new way of browsing your content on Google’s latest Chromecast. The homescreen is now focused on recommended shows and movies for you, and your apps and Play Store are just integrated in the launcher as a secondary tab. For many users, this is a simple way to access their installed apps and games as well as try out new ones, but some of us will miss having access to the proper Play Store.

While this tutorial is focused on the Play Store, you can also apply the same steps for two other apps that are pre-installed on the Chromecast with Google TV but not readily accessible: Google Play Games and Google Play Movies & TV.

Why accessing the full Play Store matters

The Apps tab on Google TV is enough for launching the apps and games you’ve installed as well as checking out new ones to try. You can even use voice search to look for specific apps. But that’s where the interface stops. If you want to manage your existing apps, manually check for updates and install them, and change settings, you need to access the full Play Store.

The Play Store app has tabs for browsing apps and games, but also a proper settings menu where you can manage and update the ones you’ve installed, switch accounts to grab apps that your partner or roommate bought, and change a few settings regarding automatic updates, payment methods, parental controls, and more.

While all of this may be trivial to most Chromecast users, many of us still like having access and control over these features, and that’s where opening the Play Store app is important.

Method 1: Google Assistant

The easiest way to access the Play Store on the Chromecast with Google TV is to just tap the Assistant button on the remote and say, “Play Store.”

The Assistant will open the Play Store for you. It’s really as easy as that.

Method 2: App settings

The second method is a bit more involved, but will be handy if you don’t want to speak aloud or if you’d rather never use Assistant. Open the side panel on your Chromecast, then head to Settings > Apps > See all apps > Show system apps > Google Play Store > Open. The steps are outlined in the screenshots below.

Method 3: Button mapping

This third method will require a bit of setup, but once it’s done, you’ll have one-button access to the Play Store whenever you want. First, you’ll need to download Button Mapper and follow the steps in our previous tutorial to install it and give it the permissions it needs.

When that’s done, open Button Mapper and choose the remote button you’d like to use to launch the Play Store. In the screenshots below, I chose the home button, but only when it’s double tapped. To set it up, select Home Button > Double tap, and in the pop-up, switch to Applications from the drop-down and look for the Play Store. The steps are outlined below.

Out of all these methods, button mapping suits me best. I just do the button combo whenever I need to go to the full Play Store app and it launches, no talking to Assistant or delving six-levels-deep into sub-menus.

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Facebook preparing lawsuit against Apple over the App Store: Report

Facebook is preparing a lawsuit against Apple over its App Store policies, according to a new report.

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The lawsuit would allege that Apple abused its power by making apps listed on its App Store follow specific policies that Apple’s own apps do not, The Information reported Thursday.

Facebook would not comment on pending litigation but told FOX Business in a statement that it believes “Apple is behaving anti-competitively by using their control of the App Store to benefit their bottom line at the expense of app developers and small businesses.”

iPhone user touching Facebook app (iStock)

Apple first announced a number of new, transparency-driven changes to its App Store policies for iOS 14 in June, including permission requests for user data that are expected to roll out “soon” after the tech giant delayed the update “to give developers time to make necessary changes,” according to a September blog post.

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The permission requests update, called App Tracking Transparency, will “roll out broadly in early spring” and require apps to ask a user’s permission before tracking their personal data across apps or websites belonging to other companies, Apple said Wednesday in a press release.

Users will be able to see which apps have requested permission to track data under the “Settings” sections of their iPhones.

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg condemned Apple and its new policies during the company’s fourth-quarter earnings call on Wednesday.

APPLE CEO TIM COOK SLAMS TECH RIVALS FOR COLLECTING USER DATA AT THE COST OF SOCIAL POLARIZATION

“Apple has every incentive to use their dominant platform position to interfere with how our apps and other apps work, which they regularly do to preference their own,” he said. “This impacts the growth of millions of businesses around the world, including with the upcoming iOS14 changes, many small businesses will no longer be able to reach their customers with targeted ads.”

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg is seen testifying remotely during a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing. (REUTERS/Hannah McKay/Pool)

He also said some of Apple’s new privacy policies are hypocritical. The iPhone maker’s new “nutrition labels,” for example, show what types of data apps collect from users, which Zuckerberg said focuses “largely on metadata that apps collect rather than the privacy and security of people’s actual messages.”

The social medial chief continued noting that Apple’s “iMessage stores non-end-to-end encrypted backups of your messages by default unless you disable iCloud, so Apple and governments have the ability to access most people’s messages,” he said. “So when it comes to what matters most — protecting people’s messages, I think that WhatsApp is clearly superior.”

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Apple did not immediately respond to an inquiry from FOX Business.

Facebook has criticized Apple’s new rules since the summer and launched an ad campaign on Dec. 18 saying it is “standing up to Apple for small businesses everywhere” by pushing back against Apple’s privacy updates.

Adam Mosseri, the head of Facebook-owned Instagram, defended the use of personal data in a Dec. 16 tweet, saying it helps small businesses create personalized ads.

Such ads “are an important tool for small businesses to identify and connect with their customers in a way that only big budgets allowed before. This is particularly important right now, given all the challenge[s] that small businesses face,” he wrote.

Videos posted to Twitter at the time showed App Store users scrolling through Facebook’s privacy information section, revealing a lengthy list of the website’s data-collection practices.

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Before the campaign launched, Cook tweeted an image of Apple’s new data permission request feature, which asks users, “Allow Facebook to track your activity across other companies’ apps and websites?”

“We believe users should have the choice over the data that is being collected about them and how it’s used,” Cook said. “Facebook can continue to track users across apps and websites as before, App Tracking Transparency in iOS 14 will just require that they ask for your permission first.”

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Sarah Jessica Parker is casually stylish in blue sweater and baggy pants at her shoe store in NYC

She’s set to make more than $1 million per episode to reprise the character of Carrie Bradshaw in a HBO Max reboot of Sex And The City.

But in the meantime, Sarah Jessica Parker continues to mind shop at her designer shoe stores in New York City.

On Sunday, the actress spent time serving customers at the boutique in the Big Apple’s Seaport District just south of the Brooklyn Bridge.

Day job: She’s set to make more than $1 million per episode in a Sex And The City reboot. But in the meantime, Sarah Jessica Parker continues to mind shop at her designer shoe stores in NYC

The 55-year-old kept her working ensemble low-key, wearing an azure blue sweater with half-sleeves over a long-sleeve black top.

She added baggy drawstring pants which she tucked into embellished black suede heeled boots from her own SJP Collection. 

The star wore her long hair with a center parting and pulled back from her face  in a single braid.

She was made up with smoky shadow and lashings of black kohl and mascara and donned a black cloth face mask.

Helpful: On Sunday, the actress, 55, was seen waiting on customers at her boutique in the Big Apple’s Seaport District just south of the Brooklyn Bridge

Casually stylish: The 55-year-old kept her working ensemble low-key, wearing an azure blue sweater with half-sleeves over a long-sleeve black top

Walking ad: She had on baggy drawstring pants which she tucked into embellished black suede boots from her own SJP Collection. She followed COVID protocols by wearing a mask

Famous face: The star wore her long hair with a center parting and pulled back from her face in a single braid. She was made up with smoky shadow and lashings of black kohl and mascara

Designer: Parker launched her SJP Collection of shoes in 2014 and in addition to the Seaport store she also has a flagship store in the former Manolo Blahnik location in Midtown Manhattan

The Seaport store is one of two she has opened in Manhattan.

Her flagship store is located at W. 54th Street in Midtown and is the former Manolo Blahnik store which featured in her hit HBO series.

Parker debuted her first designer shoes in 2014 and told Footwear News last year that she had been both thrilled and daunted when she took on the famous location.

‘I have memories in this building, in this store,’ she said. ‘I have real, sincere memories of making those purchases, not making purchases, looking at stuff, and then its role in Sex and the City, and the way we got to be in this store.’

Low-key: SJP had arrived for work bundled up in a quilted jacket with faux fur-trimmed hood. She carried a backpack and had on large headphones and oversized sunglasses

Invested in her business: Parker is a regular fixture at her boutiques and employs the personal touch to boost sales of her signature footwear

Parker starred as Carrie Bradshaw on Sex And The City from 1998 to 2004, and reprised the role in two big screen movies released in 2008 and 2010.

In 2016, she returned to HBO as the lead in the dramedy Divorce which ran for three seasons.

No doubt her shoes and her stores will get an added boost when she returns as Carrie in the reboot titled And Just Like That.

SJP is reuniting with co-stars Kristin Davis as Charlotte and Cynthia Nixon as Miranda but Kim Cattrall, who played sex crazy Samantha, won’t be returning for the new series.   

Hit: Parker starred as Carrie on Sex And The City from 1998 to 2004 and reprised the role in movies in 2008 and 2010. Pictured with co-stars Kristin Davis, Kim Cattrall and Cynthia Nixon

Reboot: Variety has reported that Parker, Nixon and Davis will each earn more than $1 million per episode to reprise their SATC characters and will serve as executive producers

Ill will: Cattrall had a falling out with Parker whom she has claimed ‘could have been nicer’ and won’t be returning for the reboot

Cattrall, who starred in all six seasons of the HBO series as well as two movies, had a falling out with Parker whom she has claimed ‘could have been nicer’.

For her part, Parker has confirmed that there won’t be a new character created to replace Cattrall’s Samantha.  

Variety has reported that Parker, Nixon and Davis will each earn more than $1 million per episode to reprise their SATC characters on the subscription streaming service.

They will also serve as executive producers on the 10-episode run. 

The HBO Max series will follow the trio as they navigate love and friendship in their 50s. 

Sarah Aubrey, Head of Original Content, HBO Max said: ‘I grew up with these characters, and I can’t wait to see how their story has evolved in this new chapter, with the honesty, poignancy, humor and the beloved city that has always defined them.’

Each episode will be 30 minutes in duration and production is set to begin in late spring. 

Then there were three: The new show is titled And Just Like That and will follow the trio as they navigate love and friendship in their 50s

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