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samedi 20 août 2016

10 best Bingo games for Android

best bingo games for android
Everybody loves a good, calm game of Bingo from time to time. It's a classic game that's suitable for all ages and adults can even bet on it sometimes for a little extra fun. The good news is there are a ton of Bingo options on Android so you can play almost anywhere. Here are the best Bingo games for Android.


best bingo games for androidBINGO!

[Price: Free with in-app purchases]
BINGO! Is one of the more simple Bingo games out there. It features a variety of Bingo variants, including a basic Bingo game that you can play completely free. There are also 20 rooms that you can play in, online multiplayer modes, and even some slot machines thrown in for good measure. To make things even better, the game allows for completely offline play as well if you need it. It seems to hit a lot of those positives and it's worth checking out.

Download now on Google Play!

best bingo games for android

bingo bash best bingo games for AndroidBingo Bash

[Price: Free with in-app purchases]
Bingo Bash is one of the most popular digital Bingo games ever. The game features a variety of rooms for you to play in along with several variants of Bingo to help keep things interesting. It's one of those Bingo games that adds in things like power ups and bonuses so that it can charge in-app purchases which isn't preferable. However, you should be able to play the game and enjoy it without having to pay anything. You can also play online against other players if you want.

Download now on Google Play!

bingo blast best bingo games for AndroidBingo Blast

[Price: Free with in-app purchases]
Bingo Blast is another one of the more popular Bingo games out there. It's main feature is the ability to play up to eight Bingo cards at once which is more than almost any other Bingo game out there. You can also play online with friends in one-on-one matches if you'd like. This is another one of those games that adds in things like power ups in order to drive in-app purchases. However, they should be mostly avoidable. It's less bloated than many and not a bad option if you just want to play some Bingo.

Download now on Google Play!

bingo blitz best bingo games for androidBingo Blitz

[Price: Free with in-app purchases]
Bingo Blitz is a hybrid of a Bingo game and a slots game. On the Bingo side, you'll be able to play in real-time multiplayer in over 100 different rooms. For slots, it includes a variety of machines for you to play on. Like most on this list, you can also purchase power ups to help your odds of winning although you can play without it. The most notable feature for this game is that it's cross compatible with Facebook so you can play on the web or your phone with the same account if you want to.

Download now on Google Play!

bingo blitz best bingo games for android

bingo by igg best bingo games for AndroidBingo by IGG

[Price: Free with in-app purchases]
Bingo by IGG is one of the most popular and highly rated Bingo games in the Google Play Store. Much like Bingo Blitz, this is a hybrid game that features both Bingo and slots. The feature set is rather light and most of the touted features include having a ton of rooms in which to play Bingo or slots. There are also collectible items that you can gather as well as upgrades that you can purchase using in-app purchases. The only downside to this game is that you must play games with gems and you only get so many free gems per day. Otherwise, it's pretty enjoyable.

Download now on Google Play!

IGG best bingo games for android

best android gamesSee also: The best Android games, ever!181

20

bingo crush best bingo games for AndroidBingo Crush

[Price: Free with in-app purchases]
Bingo Crush is one of the newer Bingo games, relatively speaking. This one features 20 rooms for you to play in, a dozen collectible items for you to discover, and power ups that you can purchase with in-app purchases. Its hallmark feature is the ability to play against real people online from all over the world. The game feels less bloated overall than many of its counterparts and it's a decent option if you want something simple. That said, there are a bunch of in-app purchases in the game which can get rather obnoxious.

Download now on Google Play!

bingo crush best bingo games for android

bingo gem rush best bingo games for AndroidBingo Gem Rush

[Price: Free with in-app purchases]
Bingo Gem Rush is one of the more unique Bingo games out there. Instead of a casual experience where you wait for the balls to be called, you instead race to the finish to see who gets there first. It adds a modicum of excitement into an otherwise slower game play experience which actually makes the game feel fresh. Unlike most, this game doesn't restrict how many games you can play with artificial barriers of entry. You can play as often as you want to which we really enjoyed. It's not perfect, and there are power ups that you can purchase with in-app purchases that can give an unfair advantage, but there are far worse options out there.

Download now on Google Play!

bingo gem rush best bingo games for android

bingo showdownBingo Showdown

[Price: Free with in-app purchases]
Bingo Showdown is another relatively newer entrant into the Bingo games world and it's pretty good. The goal of the developers with this game was to bring a more tournament style feeling to the game play. It offers online multiplayer where you must score as many Bingos as possible before the timer expires. It's not all that different from Bingo Gem Rush in that respect. Like most, there are power ups that you can purchase with in-app purchases which aren't great, but they're there. Despite that, it's a positive experience overall.

Download now on Google Play!

doubleu bingo best bingo games for androidDoubleU Bingo

[Price: Free with in-app purchases]
DoubleU Bingo is about as good as it gets in the freemium Bingo games space. It has most of the usual features, including online multiplayer play. However, it adds a bit of simulation into the mix because the game gives you a little pet that you can customize. It features a pseudo campaign mode along with daily tournaments that you can engage with if you want to .It also has an auto-daub mode which fills out cards automatically for you. It has the usual negatives, like power ups and in-app purchases, but otherwise it's actually pretty good.

Download now on Google Play!

DoubleU Bingo best bingo games for android

super bingo hd best bingo games for androidSuper Bingo HD

[Price: Free with in-app purchases]
Super Bingo HD is another one of the newer Bingo games out there. Like most, it features a ton of rooms that you can play in along with online multiplayer support. It also allows you to play up to four cards at once if you feel like you can handle that. The one includes more customization options, like customized daubers and an in-game profile that you can create. There are still power ups that you can purchase which isn't ideal, but otherwise it feels less bloated than many of its competitors. It's worth a shot.

Download now on Google Play!

Related best app lists:

If we missed any of the best Bingo for Android, tell us about them in the comments! To see our complete list of best app lists, click here.



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Sign up for Google Play Family Library and get 50% off any movie

google play family library

Looking to catch a good movie this weekend? No need to pay full price. Google is offering 50% off any movie to anyone who signs up for Google Play Family Library.

Don't take off and sign up just yet, though. This deal can only be redeemed by those who have received an email regarding the offer. Have you gotten one yet? You can check, but there seems to be a system in place.

Only people with Gmail accounts that are not yet attached to a family library are getting the offer. In addition, it seems like Google prefers sending them to those who have a set up payment methods with the Google Play Store.

Screen-Shot-2016-08-20-at-7.19.09-am

After all is said and done, you will be able to use a code to get your 50% off a movie from the Google Play Store.

If you haven't heard of Google Play Family Library, it is actually an amazing new service that allows you to share eligible purchases across 6 different accounts. These include apps, games, movies, TV shows and books. It's free, so you may as well take advantage of it!

How many of you have gotten the email? Which movie are you watching?!



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Android posts highest ever market share in latest mobile data

Android OS market share Q2 2016 - Nexus 6P

It's the weekend and who doesn't love some statistics between BBQs, bike rides and late nights? OK, I may be alone on that front, but Statista has some new figures on OS market share based on new smartphone sales that are pretty exciting. While you've been busy suntanning, the Android OS has posted its highest ever market share based on sales to end users.

Android Nougat logoSee also: Android 7.0 Nougat features overview286

Record market share

By the end of the first half of 2016, Android represented an incredible 86.2% of global mobile smartphone sales. While that figure has yo-yoed around that figure for the last few years, the most recent quarter topped the previous record of 84.7% in Q3, 2015.

Statista Mobile OS market share 2016

What's even better is that Android's market share typically grows for 2-3 quarters before dropping off a little when the new iPhone hits. That means Android's market share in Q3 may well break the 88% barrier before slowing down again.

On the other hand, in the gutter of Statista's graph, lies iOS, which still sits comfortably in second place above the myriad other flatlining mobile OSes on the list. Apple's mobile market share has been on an ever-so-slight decline in the last five years, something the company is surely hoping to reverse with the upcoming iPhone 7.

Statista Smartphones sales by OS

Units shipped

Statista also shows that Android shipped 296.91 million units in Q2, 2016, up from 293.77 in Q1 but down from its high water mark of 325.39 million devices in the quarter before (Q4, 2015). As we already know, Android has the market share by a country mile, but Apple still makes 95% of the mobile market's profits.

By comparison, Apple shipped 44.4 million iPhones in Q2, down from 51.63 in Q1 and 71.53 million when the iPhone 6s came out late last year. But even that figure couldn't match the 74.83 million iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Pluses shipped in Q4, 2014. In Q2, 2016, BlackBerry's market share dropped to just 0.4%.

Does any of this surprise you? Did you really just read statistics on the weekend?



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Woah: this flexible display can be cut into shapes with scissors

NIMS cutting flexible display panel

Everybody loves flexible displays, of that there's no doubt. But did you ever think you'd be able to cut them to shape with a pair of scissors? Or that you can do this already? A team of Japanese researchers has just developed a flexible display that works perfectly fine even after you've done a little scissor-based handicraft on it.

Royole super thin OLED displaySee also: Where are all the flexible displays we were promised?22

The team, part of the – wait for it – Electronic Functional Macromolecules Group in the Research Center for Functional Materials at the National Institute for Materials Science in Tsukuba, Japan have successfully demoed the panel. While the prototype panel is in an extremely early stage, still only displaying one color and limited is size, for it to work at all is pretty spectacular.

NIMS flexible display scissors

One of the coolest features of the new display tech is that, like e-reader panels, it only needs to be powered very briefly to change visual information. After that, the image will remain until it is powered up and changed once again. While this might simply seem like a "why not?" project, the research team have grand ambitions:

Applications in this category might include smart wearables in which displays are integrated into clothing or into devices that conform to the shape of the user's wrist. The new display might be attached to the surface of buildings. The researchers also envision using the conformable display material to change the colors of car interiors, sunglasses and windows.

The way the panel works is by removing the typical limitations of oxygen or moisture contamination on the edges of traditional LCD and OLED displays – even flexible ones – when cut. The cuttable display is made from an "organic/metal hybrid polymer with electrochromic properties" applied to flexible substrates. The polymer's breakthrough property is that it is impervious to moisture and air, meaning it doesn't need to be sealed if cut.

The researchers now plan to develop larger panels that support more colors.

What would you do with this display? is this the future of flexible tech?



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Save $300 on a Verizon Note 7, Moto Z or S7 when you trade-in an old phone

Samsung-Galaxy-Note-7-hands-on-first-batch-AA-(28-of-47)

Verizon has now updated its $300 trade-in offer to include the Galaxy Note 7. Besides the Note 7 you can also opt for a new Moto Z Droid, Moto Z Force Droid, Galaxy S7, S7 Edge or Note 5 and enjoy up to $300 off the purchase price when you surrender a (not so) old phone. As you probably realize, this is pretty much the same offer Verizon made a couple of months ago, although the HTC 10 and LG G5 have been dropped in favor of newer models and the "switch bonus" no longer applies.

verizon logoSee also: Best Verizon Android phones41

New and existing Verizon customers can take advantage of the offer. All you need to do is select one of the eligible devices and sign up for monthly repayments. You'll have to trade-in a Galaxy Note 5, Galaxy S6, Galaxy S6 edge or S6 edge+, HTC M9, iPhone 6, LG G4 or LG V10 to be eligible for the $300 offer. Note, you can save up to $300, so there's no guarantees on what you'll get.

Your trade-in phone will need to be in good working and cosmetic order, although oddly enough, you can trade-in a phone with a cracked screen if you upgrade to a Droid device. As Verizon notes: "new customers will receive a VZW electronic gift card within 2 weeks and existing customers will receive an account credit in 1-2 billing cycles."

Monthly handset repayments range from $26/month for the Moto Z Droid Edition right up to $36/month for the shiny new Galaxy Note 7. You can also upgrade to an iPhone 6s or 6s Plus if that's more your style.

VIEW VERIZON TRADE-IN OFFER

What's the best exchange deal on offer here? G4 for a Note 7?



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Android 7.0 Nougat features: a last minute refresher

The five Android N developer previews gave us a great look at future Android 7.0 Nougat features, which at this point looks like it will drop on Monday, August 22. Of course, developer previews quite often contain features that don't make it to the final release and there's plenty more stuff that Google might have added since the last developer preview. Based on the various dev previews (which we've broken down individually below), public statements and credible leaks, we've compiled all the Android 7.0 features you can expect to see in the next Android version.

Confirmed Android Nougat features:

Android Nougat release date

Based on several carrier leaks, the Android 7.0 Nougat release date looks to be Monday, August 22; at least for recent Nexus devices with other OEMs rolling out updates in the weeks and months to come. Take a look at our Android Nougat update schedule for more details on when you're likely to see it.  As always, Google won't make a big song and dance of the new version, it will likely just casually appear as factory images, OTA images and a new section on the Android version page.

Android Nougat logo

This year, rather than wait until Google I/O 2016, Google decided to release the first Android N developer preview on March 9, two full months earlier than expected. The Android N preview went live for the Nexus 6P, Nexus 5X, Nexus 6, Nexus 9 (Wi-Fi and LTE), Nexus Player and Pixel C on the Android Developers site. The first beta release candidate appeared during Google I/O on May 18, 2016.

It looks like the Android 7.0 Nougat release date will be Monday, August 22.

The Android 7.0 Nougat release date was confirmed for Q3, 2016 a long while back and recent carrier leaks from Telus in Canada and Optus in Australia have listed a "late August" launch (Optus) and August 22 specifically (Telus). Last year, Telus accurately leaked the launch date for Android Marshmallow.

Android N Easter egg Namey McNameface

The 2016 Nexus devices

We can't say for sure that Sailfish and Marlin/the Nexus 6P (2016) and Nexus 5X (2016) – or whatever they will be called this year – will be arriving on the same date as Nougat but it seems unlikely considering the lack of concrete leaks we've seen to this point. It's more likely that the 2016 Nexuses, both of which will be made by HTC, will come a little later than Nougat, but probably still earlier than in previous years.

For reference, the Nexus 4 was announced on October 29, the Nexus 5 on October 31, the Nexus 6 on October 15, the Nexus 5X and 6P on September 29. So we might see this year's Nexuses earlier in September rather than the end of the month if the progressively earlier announcement dates are anything to go by. But again, your guess is as good as ours.

Android N freeform windows mode


Latest Android Nougat leaks

Fortunately for us, there has been a steady stream of pre-release leaks regarding Android Nougat and the new Nexuses. It's important to note that some of the leaks you may have seen recently will likely be Nexus-only features and not be common to all devices running Android Nougat.

Google has already spoken about offering special software features only on the Nexuses in what we can only imagine is Google's idea of actually "promoting" its device line. Some of those features include navigation control via fingerprint scanner gestures, new Google Assistant features,

Android N logo AA

For a walk down memory lane, check out our breakdown of each Developer Preview below. You can track the features that appeared, those that disappeared and those that ever-so-briefly made it to the light of day, only to be deferred for a later release (like the long-awaited Dark Mode). It's actually a pretty fascinating insight into how the developer preview process works: front-load and then slowly refine and remove.


Android N Developer Preview 5:

Quick Settings toggle behavior fixed

As you may recall, in the last dev preview, the familiar toggle on/off action for Wi-Fi and Bluetooth in the Quick Settings was removed. In its place, tapping the toggles launched the menu screen for each setting. This, naturally, infuriated Android users everywhere to such a frightening degree that Google immediately promised to fix it. That has happened in dev preview 5 and we can all sleep easily at night once again.

Cat-catching Easter Egg

While this isn't exactly the most significant thing to be found in the fifth and final dev preview, it is the most fun. The Android N Easter Egg is a peculiar cat-catching game based on pre-Pokémon GO-era cat-catching game Neko Atsume (Neko meaning "cat" in Japanese). The premise is simple: lay out treats for cats, who will intermittently drop by (in your notifications) for a feed. "Catch" them and share with your friends. That seems to be it (for now) but we'll see how this one develops.

Android 7.0 Nougat Easter egg AA

App source now shown in App info

While the functionality has been laying dormant in Android for a long time, dev preview 5 now surfaces the source information for apps. This means that when you tap App Info for a particular app, the OS will display whether it was installed via the Play Store or side-loaded/sourced from a third-party site like Amazon. The feature is likely just there to help technicians or developers diagnose potentially problematic apps sourced from outside Google Play.

New Google Camera with customizable volume button actions

The new Google Camera 4.1 comes pre-loaded on Android N dev preview 5 and it adds a couple of nice new features. First up, csutomizable volume key actions. This means you can tell the Android OS what you want volume up and down to do while in Google Camera. Choose from zoom, shutter and volume for now.

The three on-screen settings – timer, HDR and flash – now show their options in a full-width view. When accessing previously taken photos, the Google Photos icon has been replaced with an "All Photos" label in the top right hand corner and you can now double tap to zoom in instantly. You can no longer display manual exposure settings.

Android N developer preview 5 Google Camera

New Quick Settings options for developers

This one is likely to vanish before the final Android 7.0 build rolls out, but for now, there are two new options in the Edit menu of the Quick Settings. "Show layout bounds" and "Profile GPU rendering" both now appear as optional tiles.

VR mode options now appear in Display Settings

While we already knew about Android 7.0's sustained performance mode for VR, the setting is now showing up in the Display settings in dev preview 5. At the bottom there is now a setting called "When device is in VR mode" with options for "use low motion blur settings" and "do nothing". Something tells me a teardown will soon reveal further VR mode integration.

Camera twist gesture added

If you're a fan of the funky wrist twist gesture to launch the camera in certain Motorola devices, you'll be pleased to know the same function was added to the fifth developer preview. This pretty much makes it a lock as a final Nougat feature.

Android N developer preview 5 quick settings vr mode settings


Android N Developer Preview 4:

Quick Settings toggle changes

For some strange reason, Google decided to change the Quick Settings toggle action when pressed once. Previously, tapping a toggle would turn a setting on or off straight away. In Dev Preview 4, it takes you to a mini settings menu instead (the same one previously accessed by tapping the word Wi-Fi or Bluetooth under their respective icon). This is a strange decision and one not likely to be very popular with users. (Update: Google has now confirmed it will change the Quick Settings toggle action back to the way it was – and should be.

Namey McNameface Easter Egg

If you remember the discussion at Google I/O 2016 about crowdsourcing the official Android N name, you will probably remember the joke Dave Burke made about not calling it Namey McNameface (hopefully you know the Boaty McBoatface story or the joke will be lost on you). Well, in Android N Developer Preview 4, the Easter Egg now shows a big old N emblazoned with Namey McNameface. The official name may now be Android Nougat, but it's still pretty funny.

Android N Easter egg Namey McNameface

Android N will be Android 7.0

We've previously mentioned how all the clocks in the screenshots at I/O were set to 7:00 – Google's usual way of telling us what the next Android version number will be. Well, we've now pretty much had Android 7.0 confirmed: if you turn on Demo Mode in the Android N preview 4 you'll see that the time is set to 7:00 as well.

Recently used emoji removed from Google Keyboard

This isn't exactly earth-shattering news, but as you probably realize, we're now at the polishing and fine-tuning stage of Android N, so the changes we see are going to get less sexy the closer we get to go time. In Dev Preview 3, recently used emoji would appear in the suggested word field of the symbol tab in the Google Keyboard. In Dev Preview 4 you'll have to enable that option in the keyboard settings: the default state no longer shows emoji.

Android N Google Keyboard settings emoji

Custom Pointer and other final APIs

The fourth Dev Preview contains the final Android 7.0 APIs and SDK. One of those final APIs is the Custom Pointer API, which will be utilized by devs to get their apps ready for keyboard and mouse control, essential for Android apps on Chrome OS. API 24 is the new target for developers and they are now able to publish apps supporting API 24 to Google Play in the alpha, beta and production release channels.

Android Auto navigation is broken

This is hardly a feature, but it has cropped up enough on the Android bug tracker to warrant the attention of the Android team. Remember, Android N is a developer release, so things occasionally get broken. You can rest assured it will be working again by the time your devices get the official Android 7.0 update though.

best gps apps and navigation apps for android


Android N Developer Preview 3:

Sustained Performance Mode

The idea behind Sustained Performance Mode (SPM) APIs in Android N is to allow developers to self-identify apps that need to run at high intensity for long durations, like VR apps or hi-res games. Using the SPM API allows devs to set performance levels that are sustainable for the duration without totally destroying the CPU and battery. For now, only the Nexus 6P supports SPM APIs in Dev Preview 3, but we expect that number to expand in the fourth developer preview.

Seamless updates

This is one of the cooler features coming up in Android N. Instead of being required to download an Android update, install it and reboot, Android N will automatically download and install it on a secondary partition. The next time you reboot your device, Android will switch partitions and you'll have the latest Android version without having to labor through the updating process yourself. The JIT compiler also means you'll no longer see the "Android is upgrading" screen following a reboot either.

android update 2

No more Launcher Shortcuts for Android N

Launcher Shortcuts – the ability to create custom action shortcuts on your home screen – has officially been axed for Android 7.0. The Google Developers Blog release notes on Dev Preview 3 confirm it won't appear until a future Android release and that the API will be removed in the next developer preview.

Multi-Locale Mode for polyglot language support

Multi-lingual Android users have always struggled with the rather limited support for more than one language in Android. Android N's new Multi-Locale Mode aims to address that imbalance by allowing users to add multiple languages in order of priority, so the system can switch from one to the other when necessary. Apps that don't support the primary language will simply drop to the next on the priority list.

android n multi language locale

Dark Theme gone yet again, Night Mode remains

We have no idea what's going on with Google and Android's Dark Theme. It first appeared back in the Android M developer previews but never made it to Marshmallow proper. It then resurfaced in Android N with multiple impressive advancements but is now gone, yet again.

Google has said that Night Mode and the Dark Theme are "very unlikely" to make it into the final Android 7.0 release, but that it hasn't ruled them out entirely. Apparently, neither feature met Google's performance standards. In Dev Preview 3, Dark Theme is gone, but Night Mode remains in the Quick Settings.

Google Keyboard themes

Google giveth and Google taketh away. Just as we lose the beloved Dark Theme for Android as a whole, we gain themes for the Google Keyboard in Android N. Version 5.1 of Google Keyboard adds a bunch of colorful theming options, including the ability to set your own image background.

Google Keyboard themes version 5.1 3

More changes to multitasking

Multitasking in Android N is an emotional rollercoaster of proportions akin to the Dark Theme. The first Dev Preview had a bunch of new multitasking options (see below), some of which were removed in Dev Preview 2. In Dev Preview 3 things change again. App switching between your two most recent apps by double-tapping the multitasking button remains (thank heavens), but the number of apps will be reduced to seven.

The "Clear All" button at the top of the card stack has mysteriously switched sides: from left in Preview 2 to right in preview 3. Launching multi-window mode in the recents list is now activated by long-pressing an app and dragging it up rather than left in Dev Preview 2. You can still enable a swipe-up gesture on the recents button to launch multi-window mode in the System UI Tuner settings.

Android N dev preview 3 clear all

Other new stuff in Android N (Dev Preview 3)

As mentioned above, the Android N Developer Preview 3 is more about fine-tuning likely Android 7.0 features and removing those unlikely to make the cut. Sadly for fans of the Dark Theme and Night Mode, Launcher Shortcuts, advanced multitasking shortcuts, those funky new folder icons or the shutter button in video mode, it looks like these features may not make the cut.

Android N dev preview 3 wallpapers


Android N Developer Preview 2:

New folder icons

The first thing anyone installing Developer Preview 2 will notice is the new-look folder icons on the home screen. They don't do anything functionally different to the old folder icon style, they simply show partial app icons through a circular "window". If you have three apps in the folder you'll see them in a pyramid formation, while even numbers appear in a grid orientation. (Update: these folder icons have now been removed.)

"Clear All" in Recent Apps menu

The app switcher has received a new Clear All button in the top left hand corner. When I say top left hand corner, I mean it. You won't see it at the top of the multitasking card stack unless you're at the first card in the stack (i.e. the "oldest" app in the list). There's also a new image shown when the app switcher is empty.

The app switching shortcuts that debuted in the first Developer Preview have also changed. You no longer tap the Recents button to "scroll" through apps (there's no countdown timer either) and entering split-screen mode is also different: you either long-press the Recents button when in a full-screen app or you long-press an app in the Recents list and drag it to the left.

Android N Developer Preview 2 home screen folders recent apps clear all

Lock screen Quick Reply

You know how the last preview introduced Quick Reply direct from the notification shade? Well, this preview takes it one step further by allowing you to reply to notifications direct from the lock screen. Just got to Settings > Notifications > Settings > On the lock screen to set your preference.

Remember, privacy is obviously a great concern here, so be careful. Once enabled, anyone that picks up your phone is able to Quick Reply to any installed app that supports the feature, and that could be dangerous. A granular option for enabling individual apps would be a much better idea than this blanket approach.

Android N Developer Preview 2 lock screen quick reply notification

Launcher shortcuts on the home screen

If you're at all familiar with Action Launcher or Nova Launcher, then you'd also be familiar with the idea of app shortcuts or actions based on gestures. The idea is pretty straightforward: tap the app icon on a home screen to launch it or swipe it to instantly launch an app-related task, like emailing your regular, WhatsApping your bestie or composing a new tweet.

The Android N Developer Preview 2 has also (kind of) introduced this idea to stock Android. The reason I say "kind of" is because although the feature is there it's brand new, so no apps have yet taken advantage of it. Here's what Google has to say about launcher shortcuts in its Android N documentation:

Android N allows apps to define action-specific shortcuts which can be displayed in the launcher. These launcher shortcuts let your users quickly start common or recommended tasks within your app. Each shortcut contains an intent, which links the shortcut to a specific action in your app.

Your app can create up to five dynamic shortcuts. When users perform a gesture over your app's launcher icon, these shortcuts appear. By dragging the shortcuts onto the launcher, users can make persistent copies of the shortcuts, called pinned shortcuts. Users can create an unlimited number of pinned shortcuts for each app.

Android N Developer Preview 2 landscape format app drawer

Camera changes

The camera interface is slightly different with some new icons and you can now take photos while recording video via a dedicated shutter button above the recording button. (Update: the shutter button has disappeared in Dev Preview 3.) Shooting photos on HDR mode is much faster than it used to be and Slow Motion has re-appeared in the hamburger menu navigation drawer.

Unicode 9.0 emoji support

The new Android N Developer Preview 2 also introduces Unicode 9.0 emoji, which are so new they haven't even been announced yet. Besides a bunch of fun new emoji, Unicode 9.0 also "humanizes" many of its emoji, as opposed to the familiar cartoonish emoji in previous versions of Unicode.

Android N emoji 1

Other new stuff in Android N (Dev Preview 2)

Vulkan is a sexy new 3D Rendering API that promises to manage multiple cores in an even more efficient and fluid manner. Android N dev preview 2 now supports the Vulkan API so developers can start getting their apps ready.

In the Quick Settings there's a new toggle for the calculator. While some will find this convenient it is a little out of place, because it serves as a shortcut to the full app. It also doesn't serve as a toggle at all, because there's nothing to turn on or off or any further menu items to be accessed.

Android N Developer PReview 2 Quick Settings calculator wallpaper options

What else? Landscape mode rotation now works on both the home screen and in the app drawer. Night Mode now works automatically. You can set a wallpaper to your home screen, lock screen or both. There's also a new setup screen called "Anything else?" and a redesigned Emergency Info app.

Google has also made the drag and drop options for app icons more consistent. When dragging apps on the home screen the top options will be Remove and Uninstall and from the app drawer they will be Cancel and Uninstall. Both actions now include an App Info option at the bottom of the screen. (Update: The App Info shortcut doesn't appear in Dev Preview 3.)

Android N Developer Preview 2 home screen drag options notification urgency

Apps with sensitive content (like password managers) will no longer show a preview in the Recent Apps list. You can pinch the home screen to access the home screen management overview and there is a slight change to the priority settings for apps in the notifications. There are now six options for setting the urgency of an app's notifications, from Blocked to Urgent Importance.

Android N Dveeloper Preview 2 Beta Program download anything else setup


Android N Developer Preview 1:

Multi-window mode

The first official Android N feature to be confirmed was multi-window mode, with the confirmation coming, obscurely enough, via a Reddit AMA with the Pixel C team a few months back. During the discussion, Andrew Bowers confirmed that "split screen is in the works" and with the release of Android N developer preview 1, we can now see exactly how Android 7.0 split screen mode will look.

Compatible apps (developers will need to add support for split screen mode individually) can be opened up side-by-side in Android N and resized with a movable slider. You can drag and drop text between split screen windows and go full screen by dragging the slider all the way to the edge.

Developers will be able to set a minimum size for their app windows but you'll have a very similar multitasking experience to what you already find on many OEM devices. There's also a new picture-in-picture mode for Android TV that works just like minimized video in YouTube.

Android N multi window-AA

Enhanced Doze Mode

As predicted, everybody's favorite Marshmallow feature, Doze Mode, has also been improved in Android N. Doze now features a two-tier system. The first operates whenever the screen has been off for a while, whether your phone is stationary or not. This means you can now enjoy the benefits of Doze Mode anytime your phone is not being used, even when it is in your pocket or backpack. The other layer of Doze Mode works as before, but with some more improvements. When your phone is lying still, it will enter a deeper hibernation mode, deferring network and other activity until widely spaced-out "maintenance" windows before slipping back to sleep.

Freeform window mode

One feature that's not officially part of the Android N developer preview right now is freeform window mode. As an unofficial part of a developer preview for an Android version that won't arrive officially until six months from now, it is far from ready for prime time, but it works pretty much as you'd expect it to. You can launch multiple apps at the one time, resize them and move them around the screen however you like. Drag and drop text is also supported in freeform window mode.

Android N freeform windows mode

New Android N settings menu

Android N delivers a revamped settings menu too. The changes include the addition of a Suggestions drop-down section at the top and removal of the individual section dividers. One of the best changes though is that you can now see basic details of each section in the main Settings menu. So, for example, rather than have to enter the Wi-Fi menu to see which network you're connected to, Android N displays that information in the top-level settings menu. It's an obvious time-saving idea and is kind of surprising it has taken this long to appear. Sound and Notifications have now been given their own dedicated sections too, rather than being grouped together like in Marshmallow.

The hamburger menu returns and has now been explained, providing a swipe-out nav drawer that simply reproduces the top-level settings menu sections. While it's debatable if it is any better than just tapping the back arrow when you're one level into a menu, it will provide a quick escape route to the main settings when you're several levels down in sub-menus. Of course, the presence of the hamburger menu in Android N also does away with the duplicated actions of the back arrow in the settings and the back arrow in the nav bar.

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android-n-settings (4)

Revamped Quick Settings panel

Both the notification shade and quick settings panel have received some interface tweaks in the newest version of Android. You'll now see a thin strip of toggles at the top of the notifications shade for frequently used things like Wi-Fi, Do Not Disturb, battery and the flashlight. Some of these can be toggled on and off directly, while others will take you to a sub-menu (long-pressing the flashlight will launch the camera).

A small arrow at the right hand side will open up the full Quick Settings panel. Quick Settings is now paginated and you can edit which icons appear at the top of the notifications shade and Google has added new System UI Tuner options for Quick Settings like Night Mode and offered developers the ability to create their own custom Quick Settings icons.

Android N quick settings

Redesigned notifications shade

The notifications shade itself has also been revamped, with the main change being the removal of distinct cards. Android's notifications area is now flatter than ever, with just a thin line separating individual notifications although when you swipe down the Quick Settings, the cards will stack as before. Profile pics from your contacts now appear on the right rather than the left and app icons have been minimized.

You also get a lot more information in each card compared to Marshmallow and there's a new grouped notifications API that allows apps to bundle notifications together. Best of all though is the ability to respond to notifications directly from within the notifications shade (Hangouts already supports Android N's Quick Reply function).

Android N notifications AA 1

Change display size in Android N

Android N also allows you to change the display size on your device, also known as changing your display's DPI setting. Simply go to Settings> Display > Display Size and slide the slider to change the size of on-screen content.

Faster app optimization in Android N

Following the switch to Android Runtime (ART) in Android Lollipop from the decrepit Dalvik runtime used in KitKat and before, some users have become tired of the amount of time it takes to optimize apps following an Android update. Upon first boot, the ART optimizes all apps using Ahead-of-Time compilation (whereby apps are compiled once – at boot – and then effectively launch faster from there on out).

In Android N however, things have changed again. Now, rather than at first boot, apps are compiled Just-in-Time (JIT) the first time you launch them and are then stored in memory for faster launches next next time. This means faster reboots every time and no more "android is upgrading" screen after a reboot.

Android Marshmallow Recent Apps

Recent apps and multitasking in Android N

The recent apps menu in Android N has also been revised and improved, with larger cards in the recent apps stack and new functionality. As usual, tapping the square button will bring up a cascade of your most recently used apps. But if you double tap the square button instead you'll quickly switch between your current app and the one you used last.

While you're in the recent apps list, tapping the recent apps button again will cycle you through your most recently used apps one by one (as opposed to swiping through the list) and if you let the small countdown slider beneath the app bar expire, the app will go full-screen. Long-pressing the recent apps button will launch multi-window mode, as you can see in the video below.

(Update: These last two features are disabled in Developer Preview 2. Cycling through Recent Apps is back to normal and you now enter split-screen mode by either long-pressing an app in the app switcher and dragging it to the left or by holding down the Recent Apps button while in another app.)

New Data Saver feature in Android N

Android N is also trying to help you take even more control than you already have over data usage by adding a new Data Saver feature. When the setting is enabled, it will stop background syncing from occurring except when connected to Wi-Fi. Not only will Data Saver block background activity from chewing up your data allowance, it also attempts to limit the amount of data apps use in the foreground as well. Fortunately, you can also whitelist specific apps you want syncing as per usual while still making general use of Data Saver mode.

Dark Mode returns in Android N!

All hail the return of Dark Mode! Or as it is called in Android N, Night Mode. Following its removal form the Android M preview builds last year, a lot of us have been waiting a long time to see the return of a dark mode in stock Android. The Android team has made it worth the wait though, by not just offering a dark system-wide theme, but also adding some cool new features too, like tint control to limit the amount of blue light in your display (great for allowing you to sleep after playing on your phone late at night).

Night Mode can be enabled automatically at certain times of day and there's an automatic brightness limiting option as well. This was definitely worth waiting for. (Update: Night Mode works automatically in Developer Preview 2.)

Android N Dark Mode-AA

Improved call screening and number blocking

Android N attempts to improve on the multiple different methods manufacturers have come up with over the years to block certain numbers or screen calls by baking a standard into the latest version of Android. Like fingerprint support and multi-window mode, this means that these rather essential processes should become more consistent across devices and manufacturers because they are a stock feature of Android rather than a later addition.

Put emergency info on your lock screen

This is one of those good ideas that probably won't get appreciated as much as it should be. Android N now has a setting that allows you to provide a link to your emergency information on your lock screen, including your name, blood type, address, allergies and other essential information that may be required if you find yourself in an accident and unable to communicate. It isn't in the best location yet (but this could easily change in future Android N previews)and it's not necessarily the kind of information you'd want being available to anyone that might steal your phone. but it's a step in the right direction at least.

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Android Beta Program

One of the niftiest Android N features is the appearance of the Android Beta Program, which takes the flashing hassle out of getting early access to developer previews of Android. Simply sign up for the program and add the device or devices on which you'd like to receive beta versions of Android and you'll get over-the-air updates rather than having to flash factory images.

The Android Beta Program takes the flashing hassle out of getting early access to developer previews of Android.

It's kind of the lazy man's developer preview installation method, but it also means more everyday folks can flash developer previews and help identify bugs prior to the final release. However, if you're not already the type of person that is comfortable flashing factory images you might want to think twice about signing up, as preview builds are buggy, incomplete and occasionally unstable, so they're not really fit for daily driver status. Also, if you flash the factory image, you won't receive the monthly OTA preview updates.

Moving to OpenJDK from Java APIs

Following a sticky situation with Oracle over "rewritten" Java APIs , Google will officially be making the switch to OpenJDK in Android N. It's still Oracle code, but OpenJDK is, as the name, suggests, part of the open-source Java Development Kit. As Google confirmed: "we plan to move Android's Java language libraries to an OpenJDK-based approach, creating a common code base for developers to build apps and services." The change should make development for Android N that much simpler and external changes will be negligible.

Android M Easter Egg-8

Other new stuff in Android N (Dev Preview 1)

It doesn't take long for developers and modders to get stuck into new Android releases and Android N has been no different. Features have been scraped, vulnerabilities identified, tweaks enabled and undercurrents noticed. Here are just a few tidbits of what's been happening since Android N arrived

android n logo


Other confirmed Android N features:

Project Tango and Daydream VR support

No surprises here either. Following the official announcement of Daydream VR and updates on Project Tango at Google I/O 2016, we now know that both platforms will be officially supported in Android 7.0. We'll just have to wait a little while longer to see exactly how they get implemented.

New messaging app – Allo and Duo

Prior to Google I/O, multiple rumors circulated regarding a new messaging app based on the Rich Communications Services (RCS) platform. RCS allows for much more than just talk and text to be shuttled around, including video chat, file sharing and instant messaging.

During I/O, Google announced Allo and Duo, companion messaging and video chat apps scheduled to arrive with Android Nougat. Duo recently arrived and Allo won't be far behind. Allo will be the first home for the new Google Assistant.

allo-Google IO 2016

Did we miss anything? Let us know what Android N features you're expecting or looking forward to in the comments.

Read next: Everything coming up at IFA 2016



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