One of the biggest changes facing you immediately in Android 9.0 Pie
is the new system navigation. The traditional Android navigation buttons
have been replaced with a small pill-shaped icon at the bottom of the
screen. Swipe up from the bottom to see your Recent apps, and a full
swipe up will open up the app drawer. Swipe the pill-shaped home button
to the right and you can quickly swap back to the last app you were
using. The back button still remains, but only when you’re in another
app. You can tap the pill-shaped button to go home, and pressing and
holding it will open Google Assistant.
Android 9.0 Pie also brings a few new gestures, including holding the
Power and Volume Up buttons to prevent ringing, and the option to
silence your phone by turning it over.
Digital Wellbeing
One of Google’s major spotlights is Digital Wellbeing
in Android 9.0 Pie, ensuring your phone works for you, and not the
other way around. To that end, Google is implementing a bunch of handy
features that let users limit the time they spend on their phones, see
where they’ve spent the most time, and wind down before bed.
One of these new features is the Android Dashboard — a feature that
helps track the amount of time you spend on your device. With Dashboard,
you can see how long you’re using your phone to send messages, stream
content, surf the internet, or even make calls. You’ll also be able to
set up screen time limits for specific apps, like YouTube, and even
receive recommendations to take a screen break. Also new is Wind Down
Mode. With Wind Down Mode, you can tell Google Assistant when you would
like to go to bed, and it will automatically put your phone on Do Not
Disturb mode and switch your screen to gray-scale over a period of time.
This is meant to encourage you to put the phone down before bed.
Do Not Disturb improvements
Do Not Disturb is now much simpler to use. Tap it once and you won’t
see, hear, or feel any new notifications coming in (except for alarms).
You can customize this to your liking in the Do Not Disturb settings,
and like before, add schedules for when you want this to turn on
automatically — including when you have an event based on your calendar.
Improvements to existing tools
It’s not just all about the new features — some existing and beloved
features will be getting a fresh coat of paint and some new toys too.
Taking a leaf out of Apple’s book, Google is adding zoom to the text
selection tool. Basically, a zoom lens will pop up during text selection
that allows you to see the text you’re selecting, ensuring that you’re
always able to get the right selection. It’s smart now too, and will
suggest actions based on the text you’re selecting. If you select an
address, for example, you will get the option to open Google Maps
directly with the address inputted. You will also be able to select text
in the app Overview, so you won’t need to fully switch apps to quickly
grab some text.
Volume control is getting a minor update too, and a phone’s volume
rocker will now control media volume by default, instead of notification
volumes. There’s now also an “Edit” button built-in to the screenshot
notification, which helps save a few steps. After taking a screenshot,
you will get the option to crop, draw over, or otherwise alter their
screenshots.
Finally, Android 9.0 Pie slightly improves on notifications. Android
will suggest smart replies in supported apps, allowing you quickly send
contextually-relevant responses without having to open an app. You can
also attach photos and stickers and type your own replies from the
notification. Notifications also look a little different, with use of a
new font, and a cleaner design.
Google Maps is coming indoors
Google Maps
is the most loved and most used navigation app, but to date, it has
largely only worked for driving or walking outside — not for large
indoor places like malls. That, however, is about to change. A new
feature in Android 9.0 Pie includes added support for “Wi-Fi Round Trip
Time,” or RTT, which allows for more specific positioning through Wi-Fi.
Indoor positioning, in places like malls, is about to get a whole lot
more precise.
Prevent accidental screen rotations
While Android currently offers a screen orientation lock option, it
can be a bit annoying to use when you’re switching between apps. Android
9.0 Pie offers a whole new way to prevent accidental screen rotations.
You can pin a screen to a specific orientation through the navigation
bar. If you want to switch the orientation, you simply need to tap the
icon.
Multi-camera support
Last year, Nokia introduced a new feature called Dual-Sight to some
of its phones. With Dual-Sight, you can use both camera lenses on your
phone simultaneously to capture images. Android 9.0 Pie will make
similar features widely available on most Android smartphones, as it
allows developers to access streams on multiple phone cameras
simultaneously. That doesn’t mean a feature like Nokia’s Dual-Sight is
now built into Android, but it will be easy for developers to create
third-party apps with something similar.
Inclusive emoji
Expect to see more than a 100 new emojis in Android 9.0 Pie. You’ll
find a number of gender-less emojis, as well as emojis with multiple
skin tones and hair colors (or no hair at all). If you want to see all
the new emojis that will make their way to your phone in the near
future, you can get a glimpse at Emojipedia.
Downloads app has been changed to ‘Files’
The Downloads app is now called the Files app. For now, it seems to
be a simple name change, but it bodes well for future expansion of that
area — especially with Google flexing similar muscle in its Files Go app.
ML Kit
While ML Kit is not Android-specific, it’s a new feature that makes
Android 9.0 Pie much more user-friendly. With ML Kit, app developers can
use Google’s machine learning tasks within their own apps. ML Kit
allows developers to use the camera for face detection, landmark
recognition, text recognition, and a host of other recognition features.
Performance and stability updates
Improved battery life
With each new Android update comes promised battery improvements.
This year is no exception. From refining Doze to changing the way apps
open on your phone, Google has made lots of changes in Android 9.0 Pie
to maximize your battery life. An improved Battery Saver app in Android
9.0 Pie makes it easier to enable Battery Saver as your battery begins
to drain. Instead of the option to enable Battery Saver at 5 or 15
percent, there’s now a slider, allowing you to enable Battery Saver once
your battery reaches 70 percent or below. As an added bonus, the
updated Battery Saver no longer features the obnoxious orange bar — it
has been replaced by a persistent notification icon.
Android Runtime enhancements
One significant change in Android 9.0 Pie is behind the hood: Android
9.0 Pie will feature some major Android Runtime (ART) enhancements.
These ART enhancements allow apps to rewrite their own execution files
on the device, meaning they’ll launch faster and use less memory.
Notch support
Like it or not, the top notch is becoming more ubiquitous on smartphones. Since Apple introduced the top notch with the iPhone X,
we’ve seen it make its way to an increasing number of Android devices.
While more and more devices feature the top notch, Android does not
currently offer native support. That’s changing with Android 9.0 Pie,
which will offer native cutout support. Cutout support should improve
the way apps render on your phone, as well as ensuring no content is
lost on streaming apps like YouTube or Hulu.
Better security
Christian de Looper / Digital Trends
While Google typically adds new security features in each new
iteration of Android, this year it’s really upping the ante. Android 9.0
Pie features a number of new options to make your phone more secure.
Perhaps the most exciting security update has to do with encryption.
Android 9.0 Pie will now perform client-side encryption. Any data
encryption or decryption that takes place will now happen on your phone
and will require authentication from your phone (password, PIN,
pattern). Since Google backs up all of your information to the cloud,
this change will make it much more difficult for hackers or other prying
eyes to access your information from a computer.
Each time you access a network, your device shares its unique MAC
address with that network. Android 9.0 Pie offers a new feature that
will allow you to create randomized MAC addresses for each network you
access. While Android 9.0 Pie will create a random MAC address for each
network, the address will not continue to change each time you access
the network.
There are several other security features that are coming to Android
9.0 Pie, including a unified user interface for fingerprint
authentication, encrypted network traffic on third-party apps, and user
notifications that appear whenever a third-party app is using an old
API.
Improved privacy
Google may not have the best track record when it comes to user
privacy, but the company is working to improve that. The new operating
system version will restrict access to the phone’s microphone, camera,
and other sensors. When an app is idle or running in the background, it
will be unable to access any of the phone’s sensors (other than GPS). If
an app does need to access a sensor while running in the background, it
will have to show a persistent notification on your phone.
Other improvements
There are a number of other small changes too, such as support for
HDR VP9 Video and HEIF image compression, an image decoder for bitmaps,
and improved JobScheduler performance. We’ll be adding more features as
we find them. Enjoy your slice of pie!
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