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Leaked features of upcoming Android 11

- Tuesday, December 17 No Comments
Google may be the one that develops the Android platform but, in some cases, it can lag considerably behind other manufacturers when it comes to popular features and practices. The official and vanilla Android implementation does eventually catch up to some but not always as how users hope they would be. A prime and recent example is system-wide Dark Mode introduced in Android 10 that, much to users’ dismay, couldn’t be automatically triggered based on time. Google developers have given their reasons why but may have finally found a way to deliver that functionality in Android 11.

The touted benefits of Dark Mode are two-fold. First is to help conserve battery life especially for phones with OLED screens, though the exact savings are still debated. The other is to help lessen the strain on users’ eyes, especially at night time when they should reduce exposure to blue light. That last bit would make better sense if Dark Mode could be toggled automatically depending on the time of day but that wasn’t the case in the final release of Android 10.

Leaked features of upcoming Android 11 newvijay

In a past Reddit AMA, developers responded to questions about why Android 10 didn’t have that functionality when the Android Q betas did. The bottom line was that the system was too unreliable and difficult to maintain for all of Android, even if OEMs could pull off such a feature with their subset of devices. Given how Google took its time to even bring system-wide Dark Mode official to Android in the first place, it’s still a win even if it requires manual toggling.

Movement in Android’s bug tracker now reveals that a suitable solution has finally been found. It will, in fact, be included in a “future Android release”. While the hope is definitely on Android 11, it doesn’t discount the possibility that it could arrive even later.

There are, of course, other ways to scheduling Dark Mode, ranging from third-party apps to Tasker. Of course, those come with their own caveats and Google always has to keep the entirety of Android in mind when implementing standard features. Hopefully, though, we can put a close on this brief chapter next year.

Realme X2 First Impressions

- 1 Comment


Realme has been on a telephone propelling binge in 2019, and we couldn't be more joyful. This organization is one of only a handful not many with enough support to contend with Xiaomi, and as long as the two continue attempting to exceed one another, purchasers improve and better items. The spic and span Realme X2 is by all accounts pointed straightforwardly at the Redmi Note 8 Pro, estimated beginning at Rs. 16,999. Its characterizing highlights are the Qualcomm Snapdragon 730G processor it uses, and backing for uncommonly quick charging. We figured out how to invest some energy with a pre-discharge unit of the Realme X2 preceding its dispatch, and here are our early introductions.

Most importantly, we need to address the way that the name and situating of the Realme X2 are a bit of befuddling. This gadget may appear as though a follow-up to the well known Realme X (Review) and furthermore like a lower-cost partner to the as of late presented Realme X2 Pro (Review). Neither of those is carefully valid, as this new model is basically a slight update over the Realme XT (Review), similarly that the Realme XT was a slight update over the Realme 5 Pro (Review). Gracious, and the Realme X2 is a similar telephone that is known as the Realme XT 730G in some different markets.

We state this model is a slight redesign over the Realme XT on the grounds that while you do get some refreshed details and highlights ­–to be specific the processor, essential back camera, and quick charging – there are likewise a few relapses. The principal thing we saw was that there's a waterdrop step instead of a spring up module for the selfie camera. This was one of the featuring highlights of the Realme X, and truly set it apart in the sub-Rs. 20,000 value section.

Realme 3 Pro, Realme U1, Realme 1 Update Brings New Dark Mode Toggle, December 2019 Android Security Patch

- Monday, December 16 No Comments

Realme 3 Master, Realme U1, and Realme 1 have gotten new programming updates that bring the December 2019 Android security fix. The most recent updates for every one of the three spending plan Realme telephones likewise incorporate a flip that lets clients rapidly switch on the dull mode. The new switch exists in the warning focus. Clients can likewise expect a rundown of bug fixes and execution improvements through the new programming updates. Be that as it may, there aren't any progressions with respect to center Android form that still remains Android 9 Pie.

According to the changelog gave on the help page of the Realme site, the most recent programming update for the Realme 3 Pro₹ 10,689 brings firmware adaptation RMX1851EX_11.A.21. It is measured at around 2.74GB.

The update conveys the December 2019 Android security fix to the Realme 3 Genius. Also, it accompanies the dim mode flip that is accessible in the notice focus. The update likewise remembers a blaze for call include and fixes the issue identified with the camera application.

If there should arise an occurrence of the Realme U1₹ 8,498, the new programming bundle brings firmware form RMX1831EX_11_C.16 and is around 2.06GB of size. The update incorporates the December Android security fix and the dim mode switch - simply like the new programming gave to the Realme 3 Expert. Further, the Realme U1 update additionally fixes the issue identified with WhatsApp running on the framework actualized dim mode.

Realme hasn't rolled out any improvements to the ColorOS form through the most recent programming refreshes. This implies your Realme 3 Ace, Realme U1, or Realme 1 will keep on pursuing ColorOS 6.0 introducing the new update. Additionally, as we referenced, there aren't any updates profoundly Android form that still sticks to Android Pie.

You can check the appearance of the new programming update on your Realme telephone by experiencing the Settings menu. Then again, you can download the most recent bundle from the help page gave on the Realme website.

Download Audible Suno first ever audio content platform, tips and tricks

- Friday, December 13 No Comments
Audible has propelled another sound help only for Indian audience members named as Audible Suno. It offers in excess of 60 shows described by the greatest names in the Indian film and TV industry.

Download Audible Suno audio content platform, tips and tricks newvijay

Audible currently brags of the biggest assortment of book recordings sound shows. It was later gained by Amazon to join Kindle's developing choice of books and distributers as a multi-pronged substance stage. Current utilization details point to over a billion hours worth of substance devoured yearly.

To support its offering in India, Audible Suno has been propelled as an India-selective sound assistance. At dispatch, it offers in excess of 60 new and elite arrangement in English just as Hindi. It is at present accessible for nothing on the Google Play store for Android and isn't hampered by promotions.

Audible Suno is a world-first for Audible, and mirrors our pledge to making extraordinary amusement for our Indian clients. I've generally been enthusiastic about the transformative intensity of the expressed word, and I'm charmed to have the option to offer this expansiveness of well known voices and socially full types with boundless access, promotion free and gratis. 

Download Audible Suno audio content platform, tips and tricks newvijay

The substance highlights stars, for example, Amitabh Bachchan (Kaali Awaazein), Katrina Kaif, Karan Johar (Picture Ke Peechhe), Anil Kapoor, Farhan Akhtar, Mouni Roy, Anurag Kashyap, Tabu, Nawazuddin Siddiqui, Diljit Dosanjh, Vir Das, and Vicky Kaushal, and spreads classifications, for example, fiction, superstars, narratives, self-improvement, love and connections, satire, just as interpreted pieces from acclaimed writers.

Facebook Messenger allow Hackers to Listen your Voice Messages

- Wednesday, January 18 No Comments
A security expert discovered a flaw in the Facebook Messenger audio clip recording feature that could be exploited to listen to audio chats.

Voice recording is one of the most important features of instant messaging systems, it allows users to rapidly send messages in an easy way avoiding typing them. WhatsApp, Facebook Messenger, and others implement it.




The Egyptian security expert Mohamed A. Baset discovered a flaw in the Facebook Messenger audio clip recording feature that could be exploited to conduct a man-in-the-middle attack in order to capture audio clip files and listen to your personal voice messages. Unfortunately, Facebook still hasn’t patched the vulnerability.
    Follow
    Mohamed A. Baset @SymbianSyMoh

    Simple Hack Lets Hackers Listen to Your Facebook Voice Messages Sent Over Chat https://goo.gl/Eg4eIz
    3:40 PM – 17 Jan 2017

Colleagues at TheHackerNews reported a technical description of the attack. Everytime users record a clip and send it to the recipient it is uploaded onto the Facebook’s CDN server.
Facebook Messenger

“Whenever you record an audio clip (video message) to send it to your friend, the clip gets uploaded onto the Facebook’s CDN server (i.e., https://z-1-cdn.fbsbx.com/…), from where it serves the same audio file, over HTTPS, to both the sender as well as the receiver.” states THN.

An attacker that shares the same network segment could launch a MITM attack with SSL Strip. A hacker can extract absolute links, including secret authentication token embedded in the URL, to all audio files exchanged between the sender and receiver.

The attacker can modify the links from HTTPS to HTTP to download files without any authentication, this is possible because the Facebook CDN server does not force HTTP Strict Transport Security (HSTS) policy making possible communications through HTTP connections.

Another problem is the lack of proper authentication, the expert highlighted that if a file has been shared between two Facebook users it should not be accessible by others, even if a third party has the absolute URL to the resource (which includes a secret token to access that file).

Mohamed A. Baset provided a proof-of-concept for the attack by sending an audio clip to one of his friends over Facebook Messenger, below the absolute link to the audio file extracted using MITM attack.



Anyone can download it from the Facebook platform even if he/she is not authenticated.

“GET requests are something that the browsers can remember it in its cache also in its history, Better to have this files played via POST requests with an anti-CSRF token implemented,” Mohamed told The Hacker News.

The bad news is that Mohamed was not awarded for his discovery because Facebook doesn’t want to pay for such kind of loopholes.

“We are in the process of rolling out HSTS across various facebook.com subdomains. The fact that we have not rolled it out on particular subdomains does not constitute a valid report under our program.” is the reply provided by Facebook to the expert.

“In general, sending in reports that claim we should be using defense-in-depth mechanisms like HSTS will not qualify under our program. We make very deliberate decisions about when we roll out (or not) particular protections and so reports suggesting that we make changes there generally do not qualify.”

Facebook still hasn’t patched the flaw and I hope it will give a payoff to the Egyptian expert for his work. yet.

source: securitynewspaper.com

Download Miitomo Nintendo's First Game for Android Device

- Wednesday, August 10 No Comments


Nintendo's first wander into versatile gaming, Miitomo marks a discreetly creative passageway. It's basically an online networking stage through which you associate with your companions utilizing a deliberately made symbol and contend with each other in recreations.

As of now, there's one and only such amusement accessible in Miitomo, however anticipate that this will change soon, and meanwhile, it gives a decent approach to accumulate important things that will most likely demonstrate helpful later on.

It's a novel offering for various reasons, not minimum for its freemium model, which chips away at littler, less successive buys and a less forceful battle behind them, maintaining a strategic distance from the notice and advertisement siege that infections other freemium titles.

Android N Developer Preview 4 has the best Easter Egg ever?

- Sunday, July 31 No Comments



Google has released a fourth developer sneak peak for Android N, which is about firming things up for an open discharge at some point later this mid year. The overhaul won't not sound all that energizing until further notice: what it does is finish the APIs that designers use to construct applications.

That will permit engineers to wrap up their applications for N, without danger of Google rolling out improvements once more, and submit them to the Play Store so they'll be prepared for dispatch. It's not exciting for the present, but rather it's a certain sign that the dispatch is getting nearer.

Notwithstanding concluding the APIs for N, Google is additionally expelling one of the all the more energizing components that showed up in before adaptations: support for weight delicate screens. What Google called "Launcher Shortcuts" would have been its response to 3D Touch, and they gave off an impression of being pretty much prepared and functioning as of N's second review discharge. In any case, some place amongst April and May, Google's arrangements changed, and it chose to hold off backing until a later form of Android. Since deferral is last, with Google totally evacuating the Launcher Shortcut APIs.

Google appears to have included no less than one fun change for clients:

So perhaps it won't be called Nutella all things considered.

Remedy June fifteenth, 3:36PM ET: This overhaul is Android N's fourth designer review yet just its second beta. This article at first expressed that it was N's fourth beta; truth be told, the initial two discharges were alpha discharges.

Clash of Clan with new Town Hall 11 and new defence check Town Hall 11 Power & Defence Power

- Saturday, October 24 No Comments












New Android 5.1 lolipop is available for Samsung Galaxy Note Edge

- Tuesday, July 14 1 Comment
Many Samsung smartphones on many different carriers have already received the update to Android 5.1 Lollipop, but now it's time for Sprint's version of the Galaxy Note Edge to be the lucky one.

New Android 5.1 lolipop is available for Samsung Galaxy Note Edge newvijay



Interestingly, this might actually be the first Android 5.1 update to roll out for the Galaxy Note Edge across the globe. So Sprint has really worked well with Samsung on this release, it seems.

Undoubtedly, Galaxy Note Edge units sold unlocked or bought from other carriers should also receive the new bits in due course. As for Sprint's version, the over-the-air rollout has commenced today.

New Android 5.1 lolipop is available for Samsung Galaxy Note Edge newvijay
As always, it's a staged delivery system, so it may take a few days for all of Sprint's devices to pop up that update notification to their owners. After applying the update, you'll be on software version N915PVPU4COFE.

Along with the OS upgrade to the 5.1 iteration of Google's mobile operating system, you'll also get a bunch of various bug fixes and enhancements.

Partnership: Why BlackBerry and Google is Partners now?

- Friday, July 10 No Comments
This is really shocking news that Google and BlackBerry is going to work together on new highly secured smartphones. In a move that adds credence to many recent rumors, BlackBerry Limited has recently bought two domains: AndroidSecured.com and AndroidSecured.net.

Partnership: Why BlackBerry and Google is Partners now newvijay

This almost certainly confirms the existence of an upcoming Android powered BlackBerry device and also sheds some light on why this move is being made when looked at along side today’s announcement on a partnership between Google and BlackBerry.

It was hardly a surprise when the company also announced an update to BlackBerry Enterprise Service 12 yesterday, offering enhanced multi-OS support and integrating Samsung KNOX and Android for work. While many people believe that BlackBerry is moving to Android off the back of poor sales, it is much more likely that this move is to showcase their enhanced security suite. With BES12’s update today to 12.2 comes the addition of:

A new Samsung KNOX Workspace. Users of BES12 can now manage devices with Samsung KNOX, meaning that they can use Samsung Galaxy devices in a work and personal mode as well as a Workspace only mode. This allows companies more choice when secure devices are required “all with the high level of security and privacy they expect from BlackBerry and Samsung.”

With Android for Work integration, users are now offered enhanced security and simplified management options. The update is said to integrate seamlessly between BES and Android allowing for creation of dedicated profiles for both corporate and personal information. This aims to eliminate the need for app wrapping and provides users with access to any Android application available on Google Play that is permitted by a company’s IT policies. 

Along with these updates come other smaller changes such as BlackBerry 10 integration with BlackBerry Secure Connect Plus, which provides secure access to a company’s content without the need for VPNs. Also included is support for Apple Device Enrolment Program, allowing for simpler large-scale deployment of iDevices in the workplace.

The two domains in question AndroidSecured.com and .net now redirect you to a page announcing their new partnership and just what it means to potential customers. A 60 day free trial of BES12 is also available.

“BlackBerry® and Google™ are working closely together to set new standards in enterprise mobile security for organizations deploying Android™ devices.”

The site does focus on Android Lollipop which by now is the expected OS for the potential BlackBerry Venice. A device which while not being confirmed yet has been the subject of many rumours recently.

New Android 5.1 Lolipop rolling out for HTC One M9

- Saturday, July 4 No Comments
Good news for HTC One M9 Developer Edition. Its began receiving Android 5.1 Lollipop over-the-air. Sporting the software number 2.6.651.11, the the new firmware brings a number of essential improvements to the flagship smartphone.

New Android 5.1 Lolipop rolling out for HTC One M9 newvijay

With Android 5.1, HTC One M9 will get data performance and call drop enhancements. Battery life of the device has also been improved.

Even more importantly, the camera of the HTC One M9 has received a number of optimizations with the update. The temperature management of the device has also been tweaked in order handle that Qualcomm Snapdragon 810 chipset better.

The Android 5.1 update for the Developer Edition HTC One M9 is a tad smaller than 800MB. If you are an owner of such device, head over to its settings menu to check if the new firmware is available.

Apple to allow Android smartphones to get traded in at Apple Stores for gift cards towards iPhone

- Tuesday, March 17 No Comments

Apple to allow Android smartphones to get traded in at Apple Stores for gift cards towards iPhone
Apple’s recycling and trade-in program has been around for quite some time, but has specifically been built for trading in older Apple products to get newer gadgets.
According to a report published by 9to5Mac, and citing unnamed sources, Apple will be shuffling around its recycling and trade-in program to include Android smartphones for the first time ever. This is meant to boost sales of iPhones within its Apple Stores, a noted mission statement of Apple’s CEO, Tim Cook. Now, moving forward, or once this program starts, Apple Store employees will value a potential Android trade-in based on its cosmetic appearance, as well as its functional condition.
The new program is set to kick off in the coming weeks, and if it does, it means that customers will be able to walk into an Apple Store with an Android smartphone, trade it in and get the set amount put on an Apple gift card towards the purchase of an iPhone. Apple Store employees will allegedly be able to transfer contacts from the Android phone to the new iPhone, but other data will have to be handled by the customer.
Apple’s recycle and trade-in program has been getting better since it launched in 2013, and last summer it expanded to include the iPad lineup.
If this new trade-in program comes to light, it would certainly be a stark change for Apple’s standard operating procedure, but boosting iPhone sales would certainly be an incentive to start something like this.
What do you think? Is this a long time coming?

How to Increase Internet Speed in your Android Smartphone

- Sunday, December 7 No Comments

The holidays are coming and you know what this means — everyone who came home is helping to hog the home Wi-Fi. It is also the time of the year when we are treated with plenty of online content which can zap your data plan faster than you can say "What’s for dinner?".

Despite the availability of 3G and 4G cellular communication technologies which allow us to have access to the Internet wherever we are, it doesn’t hurt to get a bit of a boost when it comes to getting a faster Internet connection.

Here are 5 Android apps that can help boost speeds to tolerable levels, and help you survive the long holiday gatherings. Note that some of them only work with rooted devices.

Internet Booster & Optimizer


Internet Booster & Optimizer is an Android app thatcomes with a series of commands that prioritizes the browser among the other applications that are using the Internet. This means that one can dig out more speed from the available Internet connection. It usuallypauses the secondary apps that are using Internet, cleans RAM & cache memory and flushes the DNS to make sure that most of the Internet speed is utilized by browser only. [DOWNLOAD]

Faster Internet 2X


Faster Internet 2X provides a convenient way to get more speed from 3G and 4G cellular networks. The app is designed using special programming scripts that will boost the Internet speed to approximately twice of what’s available. This provides a better Internet user experience.It works fine with both rooted and non-rooted Android phones. The app displays ads that can be disabled.

Internet Speed Booster


Internet Speed Booster isan easy-to-use app with a sleek and minimal design. It uses a unique algorithm that can increase the Internet Speed of your Android device with a single tap of your finger. Internet Speed Booster app is designed in a way that has it working impeccably with rooted as well as non-rooted Android devices.

Internet Booster (Root)


Internet Booster (Root) uses a different method for getting more out of the available Internet connection. It basicallychanges the configurations of system ROM to increase the Internet speed to 40% to 70% higher than before. Internet Booster (Root) only works with Rooted Android Devices which means one shouldallow the Super User privileges to run this application properly.

Free Internet Speed Booster


Free Internet Speed Booster is another Android app which could possibly help you get rid of the slow Internet speed. It increases the Internet speed from 40% to 80% more than usual byimproving the Ping latency, halting the unnecessary background apps and managing a balance between parallel connections. Free Internet Speed Booster does not require a rooted Android device.

Samsung Galaxy A3 Review with System Specification

- Friday, December 5 No Comments
Today, we get to enjoy the company of the most junior representative of the Samsung's metal-clad A team - the Samsung Galaxy A3. Just like the Alpha smartphone, the A3 offers an aluminum frame, which highlights a lightweight design, built around a Super AMOLED display. And let us tell you, this baby does look as nice as it sounds.



Samsung has been known for churning all-plastic smartphones across its entire portoflio. Pressured to evolve its product design, the company came up with the Galaxy Alpha, a super slim smartphone with an angular metal frame. But Samsung surely likes to spread its design concepts across the entire portfolio and thus the Galaxy A3 and the Galaxy A5 were born.

The plastic panels didn't stop millions of users worldwide to choose Samsung's phones over the competitors. It's debatable whether that's due to Samsung's almost exclusive Super AMOLED screens, their R&D hardware advancements or their aggressive approach towards adding new features to Android OS. It's a fact nonetheless. And as you can imagine, you can't go wrong with adding metal to their already winning recipe mix.

What we have today here is the most junior member of the lineup, the Galaxy A3. Yet to be released to the market, a pre-production Galaxy A3 is paying us a visit and we're more than happy to welcome it. Here's the cheat sheet of its specs.

Samsung Galaxy A3 Features:

  1. General: GSM/GPRS/EDGE/UMTS/HSPA/LTE connectivity;
  2. Dimensions: 130.1 x 65.5 x 6.9 mm, 110 g;
  3. Display: 4.5" qHD Super AMOLED touchscreen, 245ppi pixel density;
  4. Chipset: Snapdragon 410 chipset, quad-core 1.2 GHz Cortex-A53, Adreno 306 GPU, 1.5GB RAM
  5. OS: Android 4.4.4 KitKat with TouchWiz;
  6. Memory: 16GB storage, microSD card slot (up to 64GB);
  7. Camera: 8MP auto-focus camera, LED flash;
  8. Video camera: 1080p video recording;
  9. Front camera: 5MP front-facing camera;
  10. Connectivity: Wi-Fi b/g/n, Bluetooth 4.0 (ANT+), NFC, microUSB 2.0 port, GPS/GLONASS receiver, 3.5mm audio jack, digital compass, ambient light sensor, secondary mic for ambient noise cancellation;
  11. Battery: 1,900mAh Li-Ion non-removable battery;


It's obvious that with a chipset like that, the Galaxy A3 won't top any performance charts. But it doesn't need to. It's a mid-ranger with a proper quad-core chip, an AMOLED screen and an adequate camera. And that about sums it up.


On a positive note, it has a 64-bit processor and a microSD expansion slot, two things the original Galaxy Alpha is short on. Indeed, Android and its app ecosystem is yet to make proper use of 64-bit processors, but we're sure it's only a matter of time. And when the time comes, the Galaxy A3 will be able to benefit from any 64-bit optimizations that come up.

So, the Samsung Galaxy A3 is all unpacked and ready for a spin. We are definitely eager to check it out. Follow us after the jump for an in-depth hardware tour.

HTC Desire Eye Review with System Specification & Disadvantages

- Tuesday, November 25 No Comments
HTC Desire Eye is the most capable member of the company's mid-range family of smartphones to date. Announced in early October, the smartphone features a rather peculiar camera setup, which consists of a duo of 13MP sensors, each flanked by a two-tone LED flash.


HTC Desire Eye surely looks like a member of the Taiwanese manufacturer's mid-range lineup, though its hardware specifications tell an entirely different story. With a Qualcomm Snapdragon 801 SoC, 5.2" 1080p display, IPX7 certification, and BoomSound stereo speakers to go with the unique camera setup, the newcomer is as well-equipped as some of today's Android flagship devices.

HTC Desire Eye features

  • 5.2" 1080p IPS display with 424ppi
  • 2.3 GHz quad-core Krait 400 CPU; Adreno 330 GPU; Qualcomm Snapdragon 801 chipset; 2GB of RAM
  • 13MP f/2.2 front-facing camera with two-tone, dual-LED flash; 1080p @30fps video recording
  • 13MP f/2.0 main camera with two-tone, dual-LED flash; 1080p @30fps video recording; dedicated camera button
  • 16GB of built-in memory; microSD card slot
  • Cat. 4 LTE connectivity (150Mbps DL)
  • Dual-band Wi-Fi a/b/g/n/ac; Bluetooth 4.0 with aptX; NFC; GPS/GLONASS
  • BoomSound front-facing stereo speakers
  • IPX7 water and dust resistance certification (up to 1m of depth for 30 min)
  • Android 4.4.4 KitKat with HTC Sense 6.0 UI
  • 2,400mAh battery


HTC Desire Eye disadvantages:

  • The battery is not user-replaceable
  • No 4K video recording or OIS
  • No IR port



A quick glance at its key features reveals that the Desire Eye is actually better equipped than the still-standing company's flagship smartphone, the HTC One (M8). Only its plastic body prevents the handset from topping the company's Android family.

The 13MP front-facing camera is a clear nod towards the rapidly growing, selfie-loving crowd - it makes the HTC Desire Eye stand out among its competitors. The 13MP unit on the back is a welcome sight too. We are all but certain that it will take better photos than the underwhelming UltraPixel unit of the One (M8).


The relatively modest 2,400mAh battery seems to be the biggest question mark in the HTC Desire Eye. It is smaller in capacity than the unit found in HTC One (M8), yet it has a bigger display to light up. We will surely keep a close eye on its performance in our battery test.

So, is HTC Desire Eye a capable mid-ranger, or is it the company's flagship in disguise? Read on to find out! As always, we will kick the review off with unboxing, followed by design and hardware inspection.

New Android 5.0 Lollipop Review

- Saturday, November 15 No Comments
Google has been on a mission to redefine itself as a design-focused company for some years now. With the release of Android 5.0 Lollipop on the new Nexus 6 phone and Nexus 9 tablet, that mission has reached an apotheosis. It's a sudden, jarring change from the Android we've known, now combined with a torrent of tweaks and features. It's easily the most important update to the world's most-used mobile OS in several years. It's a big deal.



It's hard not to get metaphysical when talking about the design for Lollipop. That's because the philosophy behind the new look is based on something Google calls "Material Design”." You also can't talk about the design changes in Lollipop without comparing it to the equally bold design changes Apple made with iOS 7 last year. Both attempt to remake nearly every corner of the OS, both make heavy use of layers, and both have high-concept ideas about how those layers interact with each other.

Jony Ive’s mission at Apple was to get rid of skeuomorphism, where digital things imitate real-world objects. In doing so, he created a beautiful but cold crystal palace of colorless, translucent planes. Android designer Matias Duarte at Google, on the other hand, has built the Emerald City. Lollipop has more skeuomorphism than ever before, except the reality being imitated here isn't real at all. It's like waking up in Kansas and discovering that everything is still in color and your slippers are still very much a deep shade of ruby red.

Like I said, it's hard not to get metaphysical. Let's channel Dorothy and stay pragmatic as we go down the Yellow Brick Road. (Let's also studiously avoid "Lollipop Guild" puns, no matter how apropos they may be to Android and Google's culture.)

This is Google’s vision for the future of computing.


Those fuzzy concepts about how an OS should look and feel do have practical effects. Android 5.0 looks virtually nothing like the Android that you're familiar with. All the shades, tinted glass, and neon effects have been replaced with subtly textured whites and bright (sometimes too bright) colors. Previously incoherent and random animations have turned into a simple suite of rules for the way things move and relate to each other on the screen.

If you've used Android before, you don't need to worry about being lost. The core elements of an app panel, a notification shade, a lock screen, and a home screen for widgets and Google Now are still here and still work essentially the same way. But for newcomers, the list of UI concepts and their relation to one another can be daunting. Lollipop's main job is to make them less so, and it works.

The best part might be the animations, which are so fluid and prevalent that they're practically a middle finger to the Android of a few versions ago. Transitioning from the Overview (formerly known as the recent apps switcher, or multitasking) to the home screen to the app pane to the notification shade isn't exactly a symphony of movement, but it is at the very least more harmonious than it's ever been.

THE BEST PART MIGHT BE THE ANIMATIONS

It's also, at times, garish. Just like Apple overreacted to its old design on the iPhone, Google has decided the colors should be splashed in lots of different places. App menu headers are bold reds and blues greens, but there's no logic to the system of colors to match the logic of animation. Even those animations can get a little overbearing. It's great when you first start using Lollipop, but once you get your bearings, you kind of wish they'd go a little faster.

Actually, that’s part of one more similarity between iOS 7 and Lollipop: various failures to address some of the details. As David Pogue pointed out a couple weeks ago, there are lots of places where it's hard to tell what's happening. For example, in settings, text can be a number of things: a button to take you deeper into a menu, a heading that does nothing, a button that toggles a switch off to the right, or a button that activates a pop-up menu.

I am mortified to find that Android still seems to offer different interfaces for text selection and cut/copy/paste in different corners of the OS — to say nothing of the fact that the icons are still vague and the widgets for selecting text are frustratingly small (oh, and vary in color depending on the app).

But those are mostly minor, solvable quibbles. Lollipop is ambitious; it's easily the most ambitious update Android has seen in several years. The fact that the new design works as well as it does even in this first iteration is a very good sign.


Along with the new design, there are a lot of new features to talk about. They can be more or less sorted into a few categories, but the set of improvements that makes the biggest difference comes around notifications. Android was already the leader among modern operating systems for notifications: on an Android device, you can use the notification shade as a kind of virtual homescreen, triaging messages and directly acting on emails.

ANDROID STILL DOES NOTIFICATIONS BETTER THAN ANYBODY

With Lollipop, you can now do all that right on the lockscreen. But putting those notifications front and center means they need a few more controls — so Google is providing them. You can set apps to be private, so they won't show their content on the lock screen, and you can more easily disable notifications altogether for any given app. Both options are accessible deep in Android's settings or via a simple long press on an active notification. Incoming calls don't take over the whole screen anymore, appearing instead as a small alert at the top.

The biggest change is a "Priority Mode," which you can quickly toggle anytime you hit the volume buttons. It's essentially the same thing as Do Not Disturb on iOS, but with an emphasis on making it easier for you to choose which notifications can still come through. There's also a simple "None" mode, which shuts everything down, including alarms. Both modes have convenient buttons for setting a time-out so you don't leave your phone bereft of Twitter replies because you forgot to change your settings.

Alongside the improved notifications is a new attempt to make a coherent Quick Settings panel. Google messes with these toggles in every iteration of Android, usually to middling effect. It's the same story here. Instead of just giving us the option to customize the settings ourselves, Google says that it automatically tries to guess which settings you want to flip and shows you those. What I want is "Mobile Hotspot." What I get instead is "Invert Colors," with no way to manually change it. Maddening. The same "we'll reorder it for you" philosophy applies to the sharing menu, but there at least it seems to work better.

In the same way that Lollipop took Android's notification strength and made it stronger, so too has it done quite a bit with multiple user accounts. They're available on phones now too, but the real innovation is "Guest Mode." You can toggle it on at any time, and your guest can do pretty much whatever they want — including signing in to their own Google accounts — before burning that guest account in a puff of digital smoke. It’s a private browsing mode for your phone, and if you've ever had to lend a phone or tablet to somebody for more than five minutes, it's a godsend.

You can also turn on a "Pin" feature for apps, which prevents a user from exiting the active app without a passcode. iOS has had a similar "Guided Access" feature for awhile now, but on Android the giant "Pin" icon is much more intuitive, and it’s perfect for handing your tablet to a kid who just wants to play a quick round of Cut The Rope.

The pin appears in the "Overview" stack, which replaces the tiny multitasking thumbnails with bigger screenshots in an infinite vertical stack. It's very pretty and usually very fast, but, more importantly, some apps can make better use of it. Gmail can put in a new card when you hit "Compose," for example, so that you can toggle between an email you're writing and an email you're referencing. Chrome can put multiple tabs in there as well (though only on phones, not on tablets, oddly).

It's an idea that is great in theory but can be hard to think through in execution, especially when it comes to keeping track of your Chrome tabs. At the risk of sounding like a curmudgeon, I'll say that Duarte did a better job at Palm with this idea way back in 2009 with webOS, where you could spatially arrange your apps and group them.

Various apps have seen updates: Gmail now works with any email address, not just Gmail. (There’s inexplicably still an icon for Email, but it just tells you to go to Gmail.) Google brought back the "Messages" SMS app for those who don't want it integrated with Hangouts. Calendar has some very pretty new views. Many of Google’s new apps have been given tablet-optimized views that work great on the Nexus 9 but don't show up in landscape on the Nexus 6 despite its generous size, which is disappointing.

The list of clever and helpful features goes on. Some were seemingly lifted straight from Motorola or HTC: smart lock lets you set a Bluetooth device as trusted so your phone stays unlocked. Ambient Display shows notifications on an AMOLED display (currently only the Nexus 6 is supported) without turning the whole screen on. You can say "Ok Google" and have the command work even with the screen off. The Nexus 9 lets you double tap the screen to wake it up, while the Nexus 6 activates its screen based on small accelerometer movements.

One new feature that's pure Google: if you use Face Unlock, it now just works in the background while you're messing about with notifications on your lock screen. Unfortunately, in my testing, it's not any more reliable than it used to be — which is to say, not much.

GOOGLE HAS BORROWED A TON OF IDEAS FROM ITS PARTNERS

Google is also touting "Tap and Go," which uses NFC to transfer account information from one phone to another. It works, but in my tests, all is actually does is transfer over your Google accounts and a list of apps to install. If you don't use it, there is a new setup process that lets you pick and choose which apps you'll install during setup. It's much better than before, which involved a crapshoot of wondering which apps would appear, but it's still nowhere near the phone-replacement experience on iOS. I had been hoping that default full-device encryption (another Lollipop feature) would mean we'd get full phone backups and restores: accounts, logins, and all. Nope.

Last (for this rundown, anyway) but certainly not least, Google has also borrowed the idea of a Battery Saver mode from its manufacturers, which limits background data when you start running low on power. It turns the menu bar and button bar into an aggressive shade of orange and can be set to turn on automatically when you run low on power.

Google has also made back-end improvements, most of which will be invisible to the end user. They promise better performance and battery life, but it's much too early to say for sure. We haven't been able to do side-by-side comparisons on identical hardware, and the versions we've been using so far aren't final. I will say that on both the Nexus 6 and the Nexus 9, the performance story is mixed. Moments of pure speed and smoothness are interrupted by inexplicable pauses. Battery life is very difficult to pin down, too. Android 5.0 is very much a "Dot Oh" update — and that means bugs.

Unfortunately, a new version of Android is always accompanied with questions: will existing devices get an update? When will new devices begin shipping with the new OS? As ever, there aren't clear answers, and as they do become clear, they probably won't be what you want to hear. It's possible that this year could be better than usual, as several manufacturers have already announced immediate plans to update their flagship phones.

For the past few years, my advice to people agitating to get the update was to chill out because the changes were really rather minor. This year, my advice is the same, but for a different reason: the changes are huge, but there are still some bugs that need to get ironed out. I'm also hopeful that app developers will push out Material Design-inspired updates quickly, but we'll see.

Either way, soon millions of Android devices are going to look like this, and I think that's great. Grab your little dog and a basket, and be ready to stare wide-eyed at the bright colors. Because as soon as Google finds a way to fend off some of those flying monkeys, this land of Oz is going to be a wonderful place to live.

SONY release Android 5.0 Lollipop Source Code for Xperia Z series

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We recently saw a video of Sony Xperia Z1, Z2, and Z3 running on AOSP build of Android 5.0 Lollipop. Sony has now released the source code and binaries, along with instructions that will let you run it on your Xperia device.

To be clear, all of this is intended for developers who want to build custom ROMs based on the AOSP build for these Xperia devices. This isn’t an actual ROM that you can just flash on to your device.



The source code is available for Xperia Z1, Z2, Z3, Z1 Compact, and Z3 Compact. There is no word yet on when Sony will be pushing OTA Lollipop update for its Xperia devices, though.