Last June, Google redesigned the Photos app with cleaner navigation, new logo, and a map view. In response to “user feedback and comments,” Google Photos is reverting one change to bring the “Sharing” tab back to the bottom bar.
Update 6/16: The updated navigation system quietly returned today. If it’s not back to normal on your device, Force Stop Google Photos from the App Info menu in system Settings.
Update 6/15: The new Google Photos bottom bar with a “Sharing” tab had oddly disappeared for some Android users this evening. Those affected are back to the three-section layout as Sharing returns to the top-left corner. This regression follows the release of version 5.46 yesterday, and was presumably done in error. iOS users do not look to be impacted.
Original 5/6: With the revamp last year, “Sharing” was placed in the top-left corner on mobile, thus allowing Google Photos to just have three core sections. It’s now back in the bottom bar, though as the third item from the left — rather than the fourth. To preserve muscle memory, Library fortunately remains the last tab. Google says it’s “bringing your shared photos back to the home screen, allowing you to easily view and manage shared content.”
Meanwhile, the Print store — where available — is now taking that corner position and being moved out of the Library tab, where it’s currently a carousel advertising books, photo and canvas prints, and the premium print series. This tweak helps make the Library tab focused on just your albums, archives, and folders.
We are always looking for ways to improve the Google Photos experience by listening to user feedback and comments. Today, we are starting to roll-out UI changes to make it easier to find your shared memories and the print store.
These changes are rolling out today on Android and coming soon to iOS.
More about Google Photos:
- [Update: Just new branding] Google Photos preps ‘Storage saver’ tier for Pixel [APK Insight]
- Photos for Android rolling out new ‘Sharpen’ and ‘Denoise’ editor tools
- Google Photos now lets you add pictures and videos to an album when you’re offline
- Photos tests a handy new ‘documents’ search section for finding receipts and more
Author: Abner Li
Source: 9TO5Google