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I was playing around with the new Google+ application on the Android and I had a technical question that I couldn't seem to find online. How does the instant upload hook into the native camera application?

I can turn on a feature in the Google+ application and any pictures that I take with the native camera app are automatically uploaded to a private album on Google+. And this seems to be true whether the Google+ application is currently running or not. Is there any type of hook that I can register a callback event for in my application to access "just-taken" pictures for some post-processing goodness? I'd really like to tap into this functionality for an application that I am currently writing.

Any insight or hints in the right direction are greatly appreciated! Thanks!

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2 Answers 2

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Not entirely sure exactly how Google+ does it, but one way that would work is to use the ContentObserver interface: grab the MediaStore.Images.Media ContentProvider and attach a ContentObserver to it. Anytime a camera image is added, you'll get a notification and you can process it accordingly (including uploading).

Same technique would work for just about any ContentProvider that properly handles ContentObservers (which I'm assuming is all ContentProviders, but you never can tell).

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  • @John @Femi that would be my approach as well, it would then work for any camera app that put it's images in the media store (or actually anywhere on the sdcard since media store scans that for new images surprisingly, though it might take a while to register those )
    – Idistic
    Jul 10, 2011 at 4:34
  • This works great... now just a few other technical questions that I need answered and we should be good to go! Thanks!
    – user131441
    Jul 21, 2011 at 3:19
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    Does this work even if the app was killed by the system? My guess is no, because it's code based and not manifest based. Very different than xml based broadcast receiver which wakes up the app when a broadcast is initiated. If I'm right, this is kinda useless unless you manage to keep your app running all the time, which is not nice. Hope I'm wrong. Jul 16, 2012 at 9:47
  • Regretfully, I'm probably right. Quoting from developer.android.com/guide/topics/providers/…: connects data in one process with code running in another process Jul 16, 2012 at 11:10
  • Now I'm totally sure. I simulated the app being stopped by the system and the ContentObserver was not invoked Jul 16, 2012 at 11:48
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Thanks to Femi's answer in this post, I was able to take what he said and figure out how to emulate Google+'s Instant Upload feature. I wrote a tutorial about it here:

http://www.jessechen.net/blog/how-does-google-plus-instant-upload-work/

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  • I'm using your code but onChange method is being called for more than one time for one picture taken and also it's being called if any picture is deleted from gallery, I just want to know have you handled these things in your hackathon? If yes how you did that?
    – Waqas
    Apr 7, 2013 at 17:33
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    @waqas716 this is a known problem with contentObservers in general. you will just have to keep track of what's going on and ignore events that don't match your needs. for example, in order to check which new images were added, get only images that were created after the timestamp you store from the previous queries. Feb 2, 2014 at 9:04

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