Tech News
← Back to articles

Google Photos has turned back the clock on two of this year’s most unwanted changes

read original related products more articles

Stephen Schenck / Android Authority

TL;DR Google introduced a new editing UI for Photos on Android this past summer.

One casualty of that update was Photos losing its perspective correction tool.

Perspective correction is now back, as well as the old look for the cropping interface.

Google giveth, and Google taketh away. As Android users, we’re free to explore all the third-party software solutions we want, but if you largely operate within the confines of Google’s ecosystem, that’s going to mean accepting that the features you have access to at any given time are there at Google’s discretion. And while normally updates tend to just make its apps better, and even more feature-rich, occasionally Google does kill off some useful functionality in the process. The good news is that changes can always be rolled back, and today we get confirmation of the return of one tool a lot of us have been missing.

Don’t want to miss the best from Android Authority? Set us as a favorite source in Google Discover to never miss our latest exclusive reports, expert analysis, and much more.

to never miss our latest exclusive reports, expert analysis, and much more. You can also set us as a preferred source in Google Search by clicking the button below.

This past summer, Google brought Photos on Android a new editing experience. And it was new, and different, and we heard a lot of complaints from people struggling to get used to it. But while most of the functionality was still there, just shuffled around a bit, it didn’t take long to notice that Google had removed the ability to perform perspective correction on images. After a long wait, today Google confirms that it’s finally back.

Google’s been promising the return of this tool for a few months now, and just two weeks ago we brought you an early preview of how perspective correction would be coming back. When you can’t quite get the head-on shot you’re looking for, this offers a handy way to fix things after the fact — or just intentionally distort perspective for artistic effect.

AssembleDebug / Android Authority

... continue reading