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  1. Android 16 could bring an updated split-screen mode with support for running up to 3 apps in side-by-side windows. buff.ly/4alqtki

  2. The first public beta of Android 15 is now rolling out to Pixel devices enrolled in the Android Beta program. Among other things there's support for app archiving, new encryption features for developers, and other UI, feature, and security updates. buff.ly/43TEN06

  3. Android 15 -päivitysseurantamme on taas ajan tasalla

    Lähes kaikki valmistajat ovat saaneet päivitysurakkansa pitkälti pakettiin. Honorilta odotellaan päivityksiä vielä useampaan malliin, samoin Motorolalta, mutta muuten alkaa näyttää varsin hyvältä.

    puhelinvertailu.com/uutiset/20

    #Android15 #Android #puhelin #päivitys #uutiset #teknologia #kännykkä #tekniikka

  4. Android 15 -päivitysseurantamme on taas ajan tasalla (7.12.)

    OnePlus, Samsung, Motorola ja Xiaomi ovat saaneet jo päivityksiä malleilleen ulos.

    puhelinvertailu.com/uutiset/20

    #Android15 #Android #uutiset #päivitys

  5. Android 15 Developer Preview brings partial screen sharing, “notification cooldown” and other changes

    The first developer preview of Android 15 is now available, giving us a first very early look at what to expect from the next major version of Android, which won’t officially launch until much later this year (probably in the fall).
    Android 15 Developer Preview 1 can be installed in an emulator or on a Google Pixel 6 or later device, and […]

    https://liliputing.com/?p=166620

    #android15 #android15DeveloperPreview #google #osUpdates

  6. just breathed new life into my old Samsung Galaxy S9+ using iodeOS 4.19 (= LineageOS 20.0 = #Android 13).
    Comes with MicroG, F-Droid, Aurora and a Firefox-based browser.

    Had to first update to the last firmware for this device, e.g. Android 10, using the G965FXXUHFVG4_G965FOXMHFVB4_PHN.zip package. All worked out using the #Heimdall tool on Fedora.
    Also installed #TWRP as the recovery manager, even though it does not support encrypted file systems.

    #degoogle @iode @fdroidorg @LineageOS

  7. Google should let people who use the multiple users feature add private space as well.

    #android15
    #privatespace
    #multipleusers

  8. It says something about the incremental nature of mobile operating-system updates these days that my immediate payoff for installing Apple’s iPadOS 18 on my iPad mini 6–a 37-minute process Saturday afternoon, during which I couldn’t use the tablet for five minutes–was the addition of a calculator app.

    Yes, the basic math application that shipped with the original Mac as a “Desk Accessory” applet, and which has remained absent from Apple’s iPad software since I watched Steve Jobs introduce the first one in 2010. Fourteen years later, it’s nice to know that iPad buyers won’t have to make installing PCalc one of their first tablet-setup tasks.

    There’s more to iPadOS 18 than that, even setting aside the not-yet-shipped AI features that lead off Apple’s pitch for this release: a new standalone Passwords app (not relevant to me because I use 1Password), a new Privacy & Security category in the Settings app, the ability to require Touch ID authentication to open an app (and then hide that app’s presence behind Touch ID). But none of this stuff struck me as a reason to reach for my tablet when Apple shipped this release a month ago so I could install it right then.

    I’m not writing that to knock Apple, because I have about the same reaction to Google’s Android 15 after installing it on a Pixel 8a right after I put iPadOS 18 on the iPad.

    The standout features in this update are privacy and security tools that you hope you won’t need–a set of Theft Protection defenses designed to make your phone useless to a thief even if you weren’t able to lock it in time (but which you need to enable from their default state of off), plus a Private Space feature to hide apps behind biometric security that resembles the one I mentioned in iOS 18.

    There’s more there–see my PCMag writeup for a breakdown–but this, too, is not an OS update that I’d be able to recognize on your device if I glanced at it from across a table. Which is okay! Technology could stand to have a little less drama.

    That said, there is one mobile OS update that I do want to see get fast and widespread uptake: Apple’s iOS 18, which finally brings support for RCS messaging to the iPhone. That feature has yielded an immediate upgrade to my text chats with friends on iPhones running iOS 18, in the obvious form of typing indicators and higher-resolution multimedia and in the less-obvious form of our conversations being encrypted in transit instead of being sent in the clear. Those friends seem to find their end of the banter improved as well.

    So if you have an iPhone that can run iOS 18, please ignore everything I wrote before the previous paragraph and rush to install this update. Thank you.

    10/20/2024: Updated with a reminder to activate the anti-theft features in Android 15.

    https://robpegoraro.com/2024/10/19/the-thrill-may-be-gone-from-mobile-system-updates-and-thats-not-a-bad-thing/

    #Android15 #AndroidPrivateSpace #greenBubbles #iOS18 #iPad #iPadCalculator #iPadOS18 #iphone #Pixel8a #RCS

  9. Diese Woche wird #Android15 erscheinen, was laut @GrapheneOS zügig für unterstützte Geräte portiert werden soll. 👀 Besonders freue ich mich auf #PrivateSpace-Feature, mit dem sich Apps sich ohne Umstände in einen, von den normalen Profildaten und Apps getrennten Bereich installieren lassen: source.android.com/docs/securi
    Dies dürfte Helferlein wie #Shelter und #Insular auf aktuellen Geräten überflüssig machen.

    #Privacy #Privatsphäre #Android #GrapheneOS

  10. WAILEA, Hawaii–I’m spending the next four days here in the middle of the Pacific, but not for fun. Instead, Qualcomm’s Snapdragon Summit has called me here as it did in 2023, with Qualcomm once again covering airfare and lodging. I’ll be covering the event for PCMag, and a disclosure about that in all the copy that I file from here.

    Patreon readers got a bonus post this week about the lengths to which I went to chisel away at the cost of a new Brother multi-function color laser printer, ultimately knocking $130 off the $369.99 list price of this model.

    10/15/2024: Google Ships Android 15, Unwraps New Pixel Drop for Recent Devices, PCMag

    Eight months after my first post for PCMag about Android 15, I wrote about its official release. I installed it on a Pixel 8a four days later and, as I wrote here Saturday evening, found it an initially unremarkable upgrade. To repeat a reminder I offered in that post: Don’t forget to activate the new anti-theft features in this update that are not enabled by default.

    10/18/2024: X’s New Rules: Blocked Posts Will No Longer Be Hidden, Your Tweets Will Train Grok AI, PCMag

    The upcoming terms of service allowing AI scraping, the first change I noticed, seemed like it might not be newsworthy since X has been doing that for months. But then I also spotted the weird “liquidated damages” provision and and another requiring that any lawsuits against the company be brought in courts in a different part of Texas–and I realized that my client had not yet covered how X has begun notifying its users that the block function is about to be downgraded to a mute tool.

    10/18/2024: Bluesky Boom: X Alternative Sees Surge Of Signups, PCMag

    Before PCMag had gotten around to publishing my “ToS” piece, I saw another post emerging in what looks like a serious flight of users from X to Bluesky. The growth in user numbers–the decentralized platform crossed the 12-million-account line Friday–isn’t nearly as impressive as the way Bluesky’s apps have skyrocketed up the charts in the Android and iOS app stores. As of Sunday evening, Bluesky’s iOS app is ranked 19th in free apps and fourth in social apps, while its Android client is fourth and third, respectively.

    It’s been equally striking to see so many old friends from Twitter who had set up Bluesky accounts start using them–especially among avgeek circles, something that’s on my mind more than usual having spent so much of this month and this day on airplanes. I’m now waiting/hoping to see more people in Virginia and Arlington politics do likewise–and if the Harris-Walz campaign will start posting on Bluesky.

    https://robpegoraro.com/2024/10/20/weekly-output-android-15-x-changes-the-rules-again-bluesky-boom/

    #Android15 #Bluesky #ElonMuskTwitter #GrokAI #Hawaii #PixelDrop #Qualcomm #SnapdragonSummit #TwitterBlock #X #XTerms

  11. Wyciekł wygląd One UI 8.5 dla Galaxy S26. Samsung mocno inspiruje się nowym iOS?

    Do sieci trafiły pierwsze zrzuty ekranu przedstawiające wczesną, wewnętrzną wersję oprogramowania One UI 8.5, które zadebiutuje w przyszłym roku wraz z flagową serią smartfonów Samsung Galaxy S26.

    Choć zmiany są na razie subtelne i dotyczą głównie menu Ustawień, od razu rzuca się w oczy uderzające podobieństwo do języka projektowania „Liquid Glass”, który Apple wprowadziło niedawno w iOS 26.

    Samsung zapowiada rekord na CES 2026. To będzie największa ekspozycja w historii firmy

    Jak donosi serwis 9to5Google, powołując się na portal SammyGuru, jednemu z deweloperów udało się uruchomić wewnętrzną kompilację One UI 8.5 (opartą na Androidzie 16) na starszym modelu telefonu. Zdjęcia, choć ograniczają się do menu Ustawień, pokazują kilka kluczowych zmian w interfejsie. Zniknęła górna belka z nazwą „Ustawienia”, a pasek wyszukiwania AI „pływa” teraz nad listą opcji. Podobny, „pływający” wygląd zyskał również przycisk „wstecz”.

    One UI 8.5 has leaked… And I'm shocked at how fast Samsung has copied the UI layout of iOS 26. 😭 pic.twitter.com/P1xQdnnII3

    — DalgleishGX (@DalgleishGX) September 19, 2025

    To właśnie te „pływające” elementy, pozbawione tła i umieszczone w osobnych przestrzeniach, do złudzenia przypominają rozwiązania, które Apple zaprezentowało w iOS 26 w ramach swojego nowego języka projektowania „Liquid Glass”. Serwisy technologiczne natychmiast wychwyciły podobieństwo, odświeżając odwieczną debatę na temat tego, jak mocno Samsung „inspiruje się” rozwiązaniami swojego największego rywala.

    Należy oczywiście pamiętać, że mamy do czynienia z bardzo wczesnym przeciekiem wewnętrznej wersji oprogramowania. Do premiery serii Galaxy S26 i finalnej wersji One UI 8.5 pozostało jeszcze wiele miesięcy, a wygląd interfejsu może do tego czasu ulec znaczącym zmianom. Niemniej, jest to pierwszy sygnał pokazujący, w jakim kierunku wizualnym może zmierzać koreański gigant.

    Gdy liczą się milimetry: porównujemy najsmuklejsze hity roku – iPhone Air kontra Samsung S25 Edge

    #Android16 #Apple #design #interfejs #iOS26 #LiquidGlass #news #OneUI85 #przeciek #SamsungGalaxyS26 #smartfon