![]() We've also brought over some new features from the tvOS player. As you begin to scroll through the video frames, the interface drops away, leaving only the most relevant UI, allowing the focus to stay on the content. You can now scroll through the timeline from anywhere over the video using the same interactions we all know and love in scroll views. And lastly, we've added a new way to navigate through the media timeline. You can now tap the center of the display, even while the controls are hidden to play and pause the video. Next, we stream lined one of the most common interactions, play/pause. Pinching out will zoom the video in to fully fill the display. ![]() Pinching in will bring the video within the safe area of the display. You can now use a pinch gesture to move through the available zoom levels. First, we've added a new way to change the video's fill aspect. On iPadOS, the player integrates seamlessly into the system with full support for keyboards, trackpads, mice, game controllers, and much more! We also added a number of new ways to interact with the controls that make navigating the content and some common interactions even easier and more intuitive. And of course, the new UI looks great for portrait content as well. We've also replaced the video aspect control with a more intuitive pinch to zoom gesture, which I'll show in a moment. This makes it even easier to find exactly where you want to go. Drags no longer needs to begin at the current time marker. Instead, the timeline can now be interacted with from anywhere along the slider. We're removing the slider knob marking the timeline's current position. Next, we made some significant improvements to the usability of the timeline as well. We've also adjusted the skip interval from 15 seconds down to 10 making it easier to track how far you've jumped with consecutive skips. ![]() First, we've brought the play/pause and skip controls front and center to make them even easier to interact with. Let's dig deeper into some of the changes we've made. We've removed the chrome across the board, allowing the interface to feel native within broader spectrum of apps and bringing a more modern feel to the player. We've completely redesigned the native media player, adopting the look and feel of the tvOS player, but reimagined for a touch first device. I'm happy to say, we've revamped the iOS system player as well. For tvOS 15.0 we redesigned the system player, bringing a whole new look and feel, as well as a host of new features and usability improvements to the system player. And lastly, we'll go over a new feature in AVKit: selectable playback speeds. I'll introduce an all new interstitials experience coming with the new media player and go over some new APIs we're bring over from tvOS. We'll see some exciting new visual intelligence features coming to macOS and iOS. ![]() We'll learn how to design amazing playback experiences. In this session, we'll take a deep dive into the new system media player. We've also built in many novel interaction models that make using this new media player feel even more intuitive and seamless, and we think you're are gonna love it. ![]() In iOS and iPadOS 16, we've built a completely new media player from the ground up bringing a whole new look and feel, designed to keep the focus on the content and fit within a broader spectrum of apps. I'm an engineer on the AVKit team, and welcome to Creating a Great Video Playback Experience. ![]()
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