Skip to main content

Flipboard 2.0 update comes to Android, brings magazines and updated search

flipboard 2.0 for Android - what's new
Image used with permission by copyright holder

A few weeks ago news app Flipboard dropped a major update to its iOS users. Flipboard 2.0 brought several enhancements, but the biggest one was the addition of user curated Magazines. Today that update finally comes to Android as well. Flipboard 2.0 just hit the Google Play Store, so now Android owners can start reading and creating magazines of their own.

In addition to magazines, 2.0 comes with an improved search function that not only grabs from feed titles but feed content as well. It’s now much easier to find what you’re looking for and add it to your Flipboard or just flip through it to find the individual posts and articles you want to read. Each individual section will also get something similar to a table of contents that breaks down the sources or sections for easier navigation.

There’s more emphasis on discovery in this version, and Flipboard is pushing the magazines created by users in the By Our Readers section. Here you’ll find magazines sorted by topic, and the topics change and shift around so you won’t always see the same ones. Magazines work just like any other section in Flipboard; the only difference is that, as you flip, you’ll see small discovery sections pointing to similar magazines.

flipboard 2.0 for Android - magazines
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Creating and curating your own magazine is as simple on Android as it is on iOS. A new + button now appears on each content item. Tap it to add to an existing magazine or create a new one. Apple owners already have a head start on these, though there are several Android-focused magazines highlighted in the Android Experts area (full disclosure: one of them is mine). Curators can “flip” an article into their own magazines from anywhere, including other magazines and on the Web via a bookmarklet or extension. Flipboard will keep track of sources and credit appropriately.

Alongside the launch of 2.0 on Android, Flipboard also launched a magazine editor, giving creators more control of the order posts go in, which was missing before. It’s also possible to share to Facebook, twitter, and email from this interface.

You can download Flipboard 2.0 here.

Editors' Recommendations

K. T. Bradford
Former Digital Trends Contributor
K. T Bradford is a lover of gadgets and all things geek. Prior to writing for Digital Trends she cut her teeth on tech…
Huawei’s Android-baiting HarmonyOS will come to smartphones in 2021
huawei p40 pro plus hands on features price photos release date hand

Huawei has said its new version of HarmonyOS operating system will be ready for development use on smartphones beginning in December, and expects phones with the new software to come in 2021. Beyond this, HarmonyOS will be made available to other hardware makers for use on non-Huawei devices.

Huawei Business Group chairman Richard Yu announced HarmonyOS 2.0, the updated version of its still-young software platform, on stage during the company’s annual developer conference taking place in China this week, along with the news of its impending arrival on smartphones.

Read more
Android 10 update seemingly breaks Wi-Fi on the Google Pixel 2
Google Pixel 2 XL back

The launch of Apple's iOS 13 may have been a pretty buggy release, but it looks like the launch of Android 10 wasn't perfect either. According to new reports, Android 10 is breaking the Google Pixel 2's ability to connect to Wi-Fi.

A Google support thread notes that hundreds of Pixel 2 users are experiencing Wi-Fi issues after having updated to Android 10 -- and the only way to resolve the issue seems to be factory resetting it. Some users claim that their device connects to a Wi-Fi network but can't actually access the internet, while others suggest that Wi-Fi connections seemingly randomly drop. Interestingly, it seems like there is a range of Wi-Fi issues on the Pixel 2 after updating, instead of one issue that affects everyone.

Read more
Samsung One UI 2.0 brings easier one-handed use and nonintrusive notifications
samsung one ui 2 0 announcement

At the Samsung Developer Conference, Samsung announced a new version of its Android skin, One UI. The new One UI 2.0 has been available as a beta to a few phones over the past few weeks, and offers a number of small tweaks to the One UI interface that helps make it a little more streamlined and easy to use.

One UI 2 was developed based on three principles: Making it simpler, more natural, and more comfortable. That said, while Samsung was quick to hype up the new Android skin, the changes are all relatively minor. Perhaps the biggest change to One UI is that it's based on Android 10 -- so you'll get access to many of the new Android 10 features straight from One UI 2.0.

Read more