

SAMSUNG FLOW FOR MAC FULL
What this all means is that to actually use Samsung Flow to its full advantage, you have to satisfy some strict requirements: Limiting Flow’s potential even more, it only works with links, app intents, and a small list of apps where the developer has baked Flow buttons directly in. You can’t, say, send a YouTube video from your Galaxy S6 to an HTC Nexus 9. Samsung Flow only works over a Bluetooth connection, and even then it only works between seven currently supported Samsung devices. In practice, however, it probably won’t be as straightforward and simple as it seems - at least not for the time being. Samsung Flow may propagate notifications across devices so that users can act on relevant notifications in a timely fashion.Users may defer activity to a future point in time.

Users may act on content within an application on a different device.Users may transfer an application across devices.These are the four types of “transitions” Samsung says are currently supported: With Samsung Flow, sending that spreadsheet and where you left off in it to your tablet or desktop is theoretically not much more than pressing an Android intents share button. Maybe you open a spreadsheet from your phone but decide there’s just too much data on it to make any changes from your tiny, 5-inch phone screen. The idea behind Flow is that as you move throughout your day, you’re going to be using a bevy of different screens with different sizes and shapes - some of which will live in your pocket while others might live on your wrist – and not all tasks will be perfect for the one you’re using at any one moment. Late last year Samsung used a punchy video on YouTube to introduce a new platform “that allows users to seamlessly transition their activities across their devices.” They called it Samsung Flow, and today it has finally become available in the Google Play Store with the “beta” moniker slapped to the end of its name.
