Mishaal's Android News Feed
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Android news from an Android nerd
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Gmail's new Quick Reply UI is official! Google announced today that they're rolling out a new UI in Gmail for Android that makes it easier to quickly reply to emails.

More details plus screenshots can be found in this article.
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This was too cool not to share: You can now play The Legend of Zelda: Majora's Mask (as well as Ocarina of Time) natively on your Android phone, thanks to an unofficial port.

This might be the best way to experience these games. To learn how, read this article.
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Google finally talked about Android's new note-taking features at last month's I/O. You'll be able to set a default note-taking app from a lock screen shortcut or stylus button press.

More details on these new features can be found in this article on Android Authority.
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Google is enabling support for dynamic spatial audio over Bluetooth LE Audio in Android 15. LE Audio provides lower head-tracking latency and better bandwidth utilization, providing a more immersive audio experience.

More details on what this means can be found in this article on Android Authority.
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Apple no longer offers the best security support timeline in the smartphone world. Both Google and Samsung beat them, as Apple has FINALLY committed to a minimum support window for the iPhone (hint: it's less than 7 years).

More details can be found in my latest article for Android Authority.
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Fun fact: Millions of iPhone users have already been texting over RCS, they just haven't been aware of it.

In Japan, the +Message app, available on iOS and Android, uses RCS.

More details can be found in this article on Android Authority.
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Starting this winter, you'll be able to text 911 over RCS using the Google Messages app on Android!

Here's why that's a big deal.
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Ahead of WWDC today, I found out what version of the RCS Universal Profile Apple will implement in the iOS Messages app.

It's also heavily implied that Apple will support RBM, but not confirmed. Hopefully they share more details at WWDC!

You can find more details in this article.
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First look at RCS in the Apple Messages app!

Sadly, you'll still be seen as a green bubble.
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Android 14 QPR3, the third and final quarterly build of Android 14, is here! It's been in beta testing since early February, giving Google lots of time to fix bugs.

There aren't many new user-facing features, but here's a rundown of the few there are, over on Android Faithful.
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The Pixel Feature Drop for June 2024 is here, bringing Gemini Nano to the Pixel 8/8a, car crash detection for the Pixel Watch 2, DISPLAY OUTPUT SUPPORT (on the Pixel 8 series) FINALLY, and a lot more!

You can read more about this update over on Android Faithful.
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Mishaal's Android News Feed
The Pixel Feature Drop for June 2024 is here, bringing Gemini Nano to the Pixel 8/8a, car crash detection for the Pixel Watch 2, DISPLAY OUTPUT SUPPORT (on the Pixel 8 series) FINALLY, and a lot more! You can read more about this update over on Android Faithful.
If you're wondering, the Pixel 8, 8 Pro, and 8a are the ONLY devices in the Pixel lineup that are capable of receiving display output support via an OTA update.

Don't expect this to happen for any other Pixel, ever, because it's disabled at the hardware level on them.
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Many have already pointed out that Android 15's Easter egg is unchanged from 14, but there's actually one subtle change: You can now plant flags on planets you land on!

However, the ability to plant flags is itself gated behind a feature flag. Yes, there's a flag for flags.

For more details + a screenshot of this new Easter egg change in Android 15, check out this article.
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Google is enhancing lockdown mode in Android 15 by disabling USB data signaling while it's active. This protects against the (large theoretical) "juice jacking" issue.

For more details on this security change in Android 15, read this article I wrote on Android Authority.
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Mishaal's Android News Feed
Many have already pointed out that Android 15's Easter egg is unchanged from 14, but there's actually one subtle change: You can now plant flags on planets you land on! However, the ability to plant flags is itself gated behind a feature flag. Yes, there'sโ€ฆ
It JUST occurred to me why Android 15's Easter egg involves simply adding a flag to the existing spaceship game.

The flag for the flag IS the Easter egg, as it's a reference to perhaps the biggest change in Android 15: Android's new aconfig flagging system developed with the trunk stable project.

(Android 14 QPR2 was technically the first trunk stable release, which is why the source code for the Easter egg change is already live in AOSP as it was uploaded with the recent Android 14 QPR3 drop.)

This Easter egg isn't something that'll be appreciated by many since it references a really under-the-hood change, but it's a fun little homage and a nod to platform developers!

If you're curious what "trunk stable" and "aconfig" are all about, I did a presentation that touches on these topics a few months back.
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Big announcement from Google today about how they'll be using more and more parts of the Android stack, like Android's Linux kernel fork and various frameworks, as part of the foundation for ChromeOS!

Google says bringing the Android-based tech stack into ChromeOS will allow them to "accelerate the pace of AI innovation at the core of ChromeOS, simplify engineering efforts, and help different devices like phones and accessories work better together with Chromebooks."

These improvements are starting now but "won't be ready for consumers and organizations for quite some time." Google will "provide a seamless transition to the updated experience" when they're ready.


The first of these changes is actually already live as of ChromeOS 122, with the platform shifting from the standard Linux BlueZ stack to Android's Fluoride stack for Linux (Floss).

Google has been testing this since 2021, and as I mentioned last year, switching to Floss expands codec availability to include AAC, aptX, aptX HD, and LDAC (previously only SBC was supported.) Switching to Floss also brings better interoperability testing, a simplified technical architecture, improved security (as Google rewrites the Bluetooth stack in Rust), and also will bring LE Audio support.

Sources: [1] [2]. Via.
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Multi Control is one of those features I didn't know I needed until I saw a demo of it last week.

If you don't know, it's a feature on Samsung laptops, smart monitors, and mobile devices that lets you wirelessly share your keyboard and mouse across devices.

I use a simple, wired KVM switch to change inputs between my desktop and laptop, but having this built-in to my monitor would take a lot of wiring out of my current setup (plus let me use a tablet as a side monitor).

I'm getting more and more tempted to buy into Samsung's ecosystem; a shame I have no need to replace any of my existing devices anytime soon!

Samsung ecosystem users: What other cross-device features do you think are underappreciated? As someone who uses a mix of devices from a variety of brands, I'd love to know!

(Here's the demo of Multi Control I mentioned, by the way.)
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Mishaal's Android News Feed
Android in the streets, Chrome OS in the sheets. Here's Chrome OS running in a virtual machine on Google's Pixel Tablet. Stylus, keyboard, and mouse input work, according to the person who shared this photo (skiman10). If you're wondering how, this personโ€ฆ
If, instead of Chrome OS, you want to run Debian in a VM on your Pixel device, Google now has instructions on how to do that too.

Also, Google is working on enabling network support in the VM out of the box. Audio support, including microphone input, are also being worked on.
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Mishaal's Android News Feed
Android in the streets, Chrome OS in the sheets. Here's Chrome OS running in a virtual machine on Google's Pixel Tablet. Stylus, keyboard, and mouse input work, according to the person who shared this photo (skiman10). If you're wondering how, this personโ€ฆ
Google is testing a 1-click solution to run Chrome OS in a virtual machine on Pixel devices.

They're making a new app called "Ferrochrome launcher" that automatically downloads, configures, and launches an ARM64 build of Chromium OS using the VM launcher app.

Currently, you have to manually compile and configure everything yourself. Plus, currently doing this requires rooting your device, but that might not be fully necessary soon (will need to test this though).

(Ferrochrome is the code-name for the project to run Chrome OS in a VM on Android)
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