Author Topic: Android’s biggest update this year is here and these are its best new features  (Read 61 times)

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ANDROID's biggest update of the year - Android 11 - has finally landed in a new Developer Preview that gives a fascinating insight into the new features users can expect when it releases in full later this year.

Here are all the new features in Android 11 we know about so far.

The first edition of Android 11 has landed a month earlier than expected. If this news comes as a bit of a shock to you, that’s because Google released the new operating system version on Wednesday without any fanfare whatsoever.

That’s not a complete surprise though – the first Developer Preview of Android 11 is intended for, well… developers. However, the software still gives us an overview of some of the newest features Google is working on at its Mountain View campus.

Bubbles

Originally expected to debut in Android 10 last year, Bubbles are extremely similar to Facebook Messenger’s Chat Heads that let you keep certain chats suspended in a small icon that can be dragged around a phone display and are instantly summonable with a tap.

Although Google will need to work hard to secure developer support for the feature, in theory, it could let you have your most frequent WhatsApp chats in floating windows you can neatly arrange on your display for quick access while multitasking.

Explaining the new feature, the Mountain View firm said: “Bubbles are a way to keep conversations in view and accessible while multi-tasking on their phones. Messaging and chat apps should use the Bubbles API on notifications to enable this in Android 11.”


Android's biggest update of the year – Android 11 – has finally landed in a new Developer Preview

Improved notifications

Google is souping up notifications in Android 11. The newest version of the popular mobile operating system will include a dedicated “Conversations” section within the notification shade that will neatly arrange every communication you have with friends, family, and everyone in-between.

The idea behind the feature is to give users instant access to their most important notifications, or at least the ones they’re more likely to act upon.

Beneath the new Conversations tab, you’ll find all your regular notifications for the likes of app updates, news alerts and the like.


App permissions are a big focus for Google in Android 11 (Image: Google)

Screen recording

Although a number of third-party manufacturers like Samsung and Huawei already offer screen protectors of their own, Google is finally embedding the functionality into Android 11. That’s a big deal – no longer will you have to seethe with jealousy when your friend or family member posts a clip from their device in a WhatsApp group chat.

It’s unclear what the exact functionality of the screen recording feature looks like – meaning it’s unclear if Google will let you annotate clips like on Samsung devices. However, it’s likely these details will emerge as more Developer versions of the Android 11 release.


The first edition of Android 11 has landed a month earlier than expected (Image: Google)

App permissions

Just like they were in Android 10, app permissions are a big focus for Google in Android 11. The new operating system will give users more control over as and when apps are able to leverage a user’s microphone and camera.

Additionally, there’s also now the option to provide temporary permission access using a one-time permission.

Explaining the importance of privacy in Android 11, Google said: “Privacy has always been at the core of Android, and each year we’ve added more ways to keep users secure and increase transparency and control.

“These changes have been popular with users - for example in Android 10 we added the ‘While app is in use’ permission option to give users more granular control over their location and limit background location access. So far, when given the ‘While the app is in use’ option, about half of users select it.

“For the most sensitive types of data - not just location but also for the device microphone and camera - users can now grant temporary access through one-time permission. This permission means that apps can access the data until the user moves away from the app, and they must then request permission again for the next access.”

Scrolling screenshots

Another feature that has been introduced by a number of third-party Android manufacturers, scrolling screenshots are incredibly handy for those times your smartphone doesn’t display everything you want to share on its display at once.

As noted by XDA Developers, the feature doesn’t work in the current Developer Preview of Android 11, but there’s pretty good evidence to suggest it will debut before the operating system’s full release expected in August.

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