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Monday, June 15, 2020

Android 10 All Details With New Features

Android 10 All Details With New Features

Every year Android launched their version, Recently they launched Android 10 and it may be a good update. Inthis version privacy and permission settings are a quiet winner and therefore the other feature such as playful design, improved gestures and better-late-than-never dark mode shake things up.

While it’s great to ascertain every Pixel phone supported, therein lies the difficulty – when will the other existing phones get Android 10? Some released soon may have it, but Android remains fragmented enough that a lot of of the good ideas here will stray in other manufacturers’ interpretations and other people with older phones will simply never see the advantage of Android’s evolution until they upgrade.



What is New ??

 Updated system fonts and aesthetic
 System-wide dark mode
 iPhone X-like navigation gestures
 Even more granular notification control
 Enhanced permission control
 Beta version of Focus Mode to quieten apps
Google has pushed forward with some clever new ideas, but in context not many of us will see the immediate benefit unless they own a Pixel. On the flipside, millions more iPhones will have iOS 13 soon because it will roll out all the way back to 2015’s iPhone 6s.

Design

A playful tweak to the fonts of menus is noticeable immediately in headers, but the quality Roboto font that Google has used for aeons remains around for the foremost part.
There are more boxes and line divides on certain screens that provides a clean feel throughout. If you’re coming from Pie on a Pixel, you’ll get on just fine and it’s a welcome return to a rounder, bouncier look than the more austere Oreo laid the groundwork for. It means Google can’t really decide what it wants for Android’s design, but with the Android logo changed for the primary time since 2014 keeping the green droid, we reckon it’s shooting for quirky individuality, which is usually when Android excels.

Dark mode

Yes there is a dark mode in this version. A proper, system-wide one too, but it’s notable that it's taken till now for Pixels to urge this. Samsung’s One UI deploys it alright and has done so since the Galaxy S10 launched in February. For Google to require this long is weird, but a minimum of it’s here. It applies the theme to most but not all stock Google apps, and doesn’t take over third party ones, so tons remains light where you would like it to be dark.

Gesture

The new gestures are swipe up to go home screen from anywhere you want, that means there’s no home button. A swipe up from the bottom and hold gets you the app switcher. From this screen again you can swipe for the app drawer. It’s a tad fiddly and therefore the animations are nowhere near as fluid as on iOS but they're improved over Pie.

Swiping along bottom of the screen quickly slides between apps (yes, just like the iPhone) and swiping up from either bottom corner triggers Assistant.

But there’s no back button. Instead, when you swipe in from the left or right of the display then you can go back. It’s system-wide, so you can go back by clicking a menu or back button. And this is far quicker than we thought. the marginally curved edges of the Pixel 2 XL encourage it but with a lipped case on it’s difficult to register the swipe.

Notifications

Handling notifications may be a dream on Android 10. Either via settings or by pressing and holding a notification you'll granularly affect what you are doing and don’t want to ascertain from an app. Facebook alone has 18 notification types that you simply can tailor. Once you’ve had this level of control, the straightforward on or off per app setting that other phones restrict you to is actually prehistoric.

Privacy and Accessibility

There’s a replacement Privacy section within the settings menu now with what's debatably Android 10’s best feature, albeit it isn’t flashy. The permission manager may be a clear, accessible hub where you'll deny rogue apps permissions they don’t need. a drag on Android is that apps present themselves as needing permissions to figure – they don’t. As I discovered, the ny Times app doesn't need access to the camera.
On the opposite hand, it shows why some people can’t be handling Android’s manual way of doing things. But if you’re employing a phone from Google, a corporation that monetises data in exchange for free of charge services, a minimum of this feature is transparent enough to point out you what permissions apps have and allows you to reverse them.
Accessibility features remain, well, accessible on Pixels to a satisfying degree but the new headline feature Live Caption isn't on this first release. it'll display on-screen captions of any audio or video on your phone, even without a knowledge connection. It should work rather well and can come to Pixels first, as do many of those new features.

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