Version 1.0.7 Release Notes
Version 1.0.7 provides Alexa integration, a home screen Watchlist row, search results grid, VAST enhancements, and more. It was released on January 16, 2018. (Version 1.0.6 was an internal release.)
- New Features
- Alexa Integration
- Add to Watchlist Button and Watchlist Row on App's Home screen
- Continue Watching Row on App's Home Screen
- Time Remaining Displayed on Image Thumbs
- Search Results Organizes Returned Items into Grid
- VAST Ads Enhancements: VMAP tracking, Play/Pause/Click events in ads, and MiniBrowser Support
- BrightCove Media Player Support
- Mix Free Content with Login-Required Content
- Easier to Switch Between Reflection and Translation
- Documentation Update: Maps
- Bug Fixes
New Features
The following are new features in the 1.0.7 release.
Alexa Integration
Fire App Builder now includes Alexa integration by default. You can use voice commands to control media playback, such as play, pause, stop, rewind, fast-forward, and so on.
If your Fire TV device has a microphone button, you can hold down the microphone button to say the commands. Or if you've linked your Echo or Echo Dot with your Fire TV, you can use the trigger word "Alexa" without pushing your microphone button to initiate the commands. Common commands are as follows:
- "Alexa, play"
- "Alexa, resume"
- "Alexa, pause"
- "Alexa, rewind 5 minutes"
- "Alexa, fast forward 5 minutes"
- "Alexa, fast forward" (default is 10 seconds)
- "Alexa, rewind" (default is 10 seconds)
For more details, see Try the Alexa Integration.
Add to Watchlist Button and Watchlist Row on App's Home screen
When you view videos, an "Add to Watchlist" button appears on the Content Details screen:
Videos that you add to your watchlist appear on the "Watchlist" row on the app's Home screen.
(If you don't want the Watchlist functionality, you can remove it.)
Continue Watching Row on App's Home Screen
The "Continue Watching" row on the app's home screen shows content that you were recently watching.
If content is played for more than 10 seconds, it gets added to this row. To change threshold, limit the number of items shown, or remove the Continue Watching row, see Modify the Continue Watching Row on the App's Home Screen.
Time Remaining Displayed on Image Thumbs
When you return to a video that you haven't finished watching, the time remaining to complete the video appears in the image thumbnail.
Here's the image thumbnail in the context of the Content Details screen:
Search Results Organizes Returned Items into Grid
Previously, the search results page showed all results in a single row (which would require horizontal scrolling if you had a lot of results). Now the search results appear in a grid row.
VAST Ads Enhancements: VMAP tracking, Play/Pause/Click events in ads, and MiniBrowser Support
VAST Ads received several major enhancements in this release:
VAST: Support for VMAP breakstart, breakend, and error tracking events
The VAST Ads component provides support for several new VMAP tracking events:
breakstart
(when your ad break starts)breakend
(when your ad break ends)error
(errors that occur during the ad breaks)
(VMAP stands for Video Multiple Ad Playlist and refers to the ability to schedule multiple ads from a single tag.) Fire App Builder's support for these tags allows you to gather better information about the ads you show. For info on how to configure VAST ads, see the VAST Ads Component.
VAST: Play/Pause/Click Events in Ads
During video ads, users can now play, pause, and click events in the VAST ads that play. To enable this interactivity, you simply add some strings to your app's custom.xml file. For details, see the VAST Ads Component (specifically the last step in the section titled Configure Vast Ads.)
VAST: Web Browser Display ("MiniBrowser") for VAST Ads
Fire App Builder now provides a WebView module called MiniBrowser to support user interaction, primarily for ad clicks. When users click links in your VAST ad, the MiniBrowser can open with the target web pages. To enable Vast ads to open in the MiniBrowser, see the Launch Video Clicks in a MiniBrowser.
The MiniBrowser component required a minor update to the License and Terms of Use files. This component is licensed under the Amazon Software License, described in the terms_of_use.html (inside app > assets).
BrightCove Media Player Support
Brightcove media player is now available as an alternative to the default Amazon media player. By default, the Amazon media player (AMZNMediaPlayerComponent) is configured in Fire App Builder. However, if you have a specific need to use the Brightcove media player, you can also choose to use this media player instead. For example, you may want to use BrightCove if you are already familiar with it or use BrightCove’s online video platform (OVP) service. See BrightCove Media Player Component for more details.
Mix Free Content with Login-Required Content
If your content requires login but you want to provide some free content too — free content that doesn't require login — you can do so. For example, suppose you use Adobe Pass to require users to log in to view your app's content. For users without login access, you might want to provide some free content as a teaser to subscribe.
Previously, Fire App Builder didn't allow you to mix both free content with login-required content — everything was either free or behind a login. Now you can mix the two content types. For content you identify as free, users will see the free category on the Home screen where they can view the content without logging in. See Mix Free Content with Login-Required Content for details.
Easier to Switch Between Reflection and Translation
"translator": "ContentContainerTranslator"
and your contents recipe includes a property called "translator": "ContentTranslator"
, then you're using translation already. As such, you can disregard this section.Translation and reflection refer to the processes used to map your media feed's properties to Fire App Builder's content model. Previously, if you wanted to use reflection (rather than the default translation method), you had to use different model names in the mapping logic for your content and category recipes. With the 1.0.7 release, both translation and reflection use the same model names. This makes it consistent and easier to switch between translation and reflection if needed.
Documentation Update: Maps
To better guide your journey in customizing, configuring, and building your Fire App Builder app, the documentation now offers various process maps to better guide you from topic to topic through a larger process. You will see these maps at the top of most documentation pages. See Beginning-to-End Process Maps for Building Your App for more details.
Bug Fixes
Updated Package Name in Sample App Manifest
The default package name in the app manifest was updated to remove the string amazon
. The default app manifest is now as follows:
<manifest xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
package="com.fireappbuilder.android.calypso">
You must change this default package name when you set up your app anyway (see Customize the Fire App Builder Sample Project).
If you have amazon
in your package name, it creates conflicts with Amazon Catalog. (However, note that you cannot change your package name without severing the connection with your previous app, so if this is an issue, contact Support from within the Developer Portal.)
Removed READ_PHONE_STATE Permission
Previously, the app manifest requested an implicit READ_PHONE_STATE permission. This created issues when submitting Fire App Builder apps into Google Play. This permission was not needed and so was removed.
Users No Longer Prompted for WRITE_EXTERNAL_STORAGE Permission
Previously, when updating your app, the Appstore would prompt users for permission to write to external storage. This issue was fixed with a change to the Fire App Builder manifest.
Last updated: Jan 16, 2018