Google Launches Android N Developer Preview And Beta Program (engadget.com)
Google is releasing Android N Preview to developers today. The early release is meant to collect feedback sooner than usual, and even includes a new way to download the update. Instead of installing a drive image, you can participate in an Android Beta Program that installs pre-release versions over the air (as long as you have a relatively recent Nexus device or the Pixel C). The biggest attraction, by far, is a new multi-window mode, which lets you use split-screen modes on phones and tablets, and even specify minimum allowable dimensions. There's even a picture-in-picture video mode, too, so you can keep watching YouTube while you message your friends. Other improvements in the preview include direct reply notifications that let you reply to a message right from an alert, iOS-style. Also, Android N optionally bundles notifications from the same app so that they don't clutter your view. Marshmallow's Doze feature has been improved to save battery life whenever the screen turns off, and coders can take advantage of Java 8 features. Google is also working to reduce the memory needs of Android via Project Svelte, allowing the Android OS to run smoothly on lower specced devices.
How exciting... all these N improvements I will likely never use, and yet I bet I still won't be able to:
* List/filter contacts by group, which was TAKEN AWAY from us years ago with no notice and for no apparent reason.
* Turn on the Smart Lock but WITHOUT the stupid swipe to continue.
* Have settings menus where the items are actually alphabetized so they can be found quickly.
* Have a battery usage/monitoring system which actually works and means something (like it used to).
* Choose the icon set used in various places, especially the main status bar, so they are actually visible and meaningful (yes, they actually took away the "bars" from WiFi, Cell, and Battery... how brilliant)
* Turn off the persistent Android Wear connected notification which is unnecessary.
I am sure I can think of a lot more, but I am tired (and yes, we are talking Nexus)
There is no image for nexus 5 atm. Sad. Looks like the device finally got unsuported.
Uhhhhhhhhhhhh...
I really hope not. I am a Nexus 5 user and was disappointed that they are not supporting this in the Beta program. However, I will DEFECT from Google entirely if they do not support the device with the next version of the OS. I mean, it's only two years old. I don't want to be "forced" to upgrade to help them make more money by selling more devices.
I mean, that would put me over the edge: use my privacy to make a profit? fine! Force me to buy new hardware on your schedule to use the new OS? Not fine. :-)
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Google got it right on Holo, but took a major step back on Material Design.
Twitter supports and protects racists - by smearing their critics with the "Hate Speech" label.
A Google employee was on here a few months ago exhorting us to all buy Nexus devices because they received better support than non Google branded devices. I queried why the Nexus 4 received no Marshmallow update when it was a still a perfectly capable piece of hardware and was told, effectively, stiff cheddar.
Maybe there's an aftermarket for IoT; a Galaxy Nexus/Nexus 4 benchmarks competitively with a rPi 2?
Wow this is incredible! Android has multiple windows at once now! Truly amazing. Will the innovation of mobile never cease? Maybe they'll innovate beyond the copy/paste of plain text too allowing images and etc.
Truly that would advance mobile to way beyone anything I have on the desktop[*].
[*] I like retrocomputing from the early 80s. Like 1985 and before.
SJW n. One who posts facts.
If apps can be resizable and specify their dimensions then they can appear in split panes and later on as windows on a desktop. The way that universal apps do in Windows 10. So I see this as part of Google's efforts to kill ChromeOS and merge some of the concepts into Android. I wouldn't be surprised if the Google's app launcher becomes a kind of desktop in future iterations.
The Note 4 (which came just after the S5) really did a great job with multi-window capabilities : floating windows, iconisation, drag and drop between windows, split screen... Unfortunately, few apps support these features because of the Play Store rules that state that multi-window must be disabled unless explicitly authorized in case the app doesn't behave properly. In practice, when forced, most apps do quite well.
Should Google make multi-window part of the official Android, we should see much more apps officially supporting it, which would be great. And if possible, they shouldn't limit themselves to just split-screen.