All the big changes happened in Lollipop. Now it's Marshmallow's
turn to show the world how useful and personal Android can be.
Android 6.0 is
kind of plain. I’m digging all the new features that Google added in
Marshmallow, but most of what’s new is hidden deep inside the operating system.
That doesn’t mean
Marshmallow isn’t a significant update. With Android, every new version is more
complete than the last and, with more applications adhering to Material Design standards,
it’s finally feeling like a cohesive operating system.
It helps, too,
that Google added in new contextual abilities with Now on Tap. Marshmallow even
offers a bit more transparency about what’s going on under the hood of your
phone or tablet. This is what Android should have been like years ago,
Let’s start with the lock screen
Google’s tried
plenty of different things with the Lock screen over the years, but thankfully
it eventually established on the idea that it should remain simple and
utilitarian.
Marshmallow’s lock
screen is accurately that: the clock now has bolder text, so you can more
easily glance over to check the time, and the notification panel has been
developed with drop-down access to the Quick Settings. The dialer shortcut in
the lower left corner has been swapped with a Google Now shortcut, so you can
start a voice search without unlocking your device. And if you set up a pin
code or pattern unlock, there’s a handy Emergency button that peaks out
underneath. In case you’re in an awful situation.
I never was a fan
of widgets and thing clogging up the look screen, so I’m glad Google kept that
away from Marshmallow. I visualize that the lock screen is also a bit more
quaint now in accommodate fingerprint scanning. So I’m curious to see how
stretched it will take to unlock the screen with a phone that has that hardware
feature enabled.
IMPROVED COPY AND PASTE
Android was one of
first mobile operating systems to implement the ability to copy and paste – I
loved bragging about that point to my IPhone – loving friends – and now,
Google’s perfecting it.
In Marshmallow,
Google fixed the copy and paste features so that it’s easier to use. Tapping
and holding is now more responsive and you won’t have to wait as lengthy for
the option window to pop up. Google also swapped out the confusing editing
overlay with more obvious choices that float over the selected text. And, if
you have Google Translate installed, the copy and paste settings will offer the
skill to instantly translate the text. This feature alone is going to make
transcribing Romanian news stories so much easier for us.
There is one
caveat, however: some application don’t yet support this new copy and paste
device. Google Chrome, for instance, still uses the copy and paste toolbar at
the top of the screen. I’m sure consistency from Google across the board.
A MORE INFORMATIVE SETTINGS MENU
I appreciate that with every new
version of Android, Google beefs up the Settings menu just a little bit more.
But sometimes, it serves as reminder that Google’s still figuring out how to
organize Android.
For instance, if
you scroll down in the settings to the about tab, you’ll find a section
detailing the last time you’ve received a security update / I like that this
sort of transparency is now common place, but it’s better late than never. You
can now also peep the new Memory management menu to check on how much Ram your
device is using and whether or not it’s doing so at a normal rate. I plan to
use this feature religiously when I get Marshmallow on my Galaxy S6 Edge.
NOW ON TAP IS WATCHING YOU
If
you’ve been wondering why you were giving google access to so much of your
information all this time, look no further than Google Now on Tap. It’s not
only one of the best features of Marshmallow, but it also serve as reminder of
how Apple’s Siri and Microsoft’s Cortana still falls short.
Google
always curious about the context of your internet activity, so it built the Now
on tap API to hook into what you’re seeing on screen and deliver search results
in a matter that’s relevant. The minute you hold down the Home button to engage
it, ‘Now’ on Tap is actively attempting to figure out what’s most important
about what you’re looking at.
Is
an article on Marshmallow updates, Now on tap managed to ignore the mention of
the numerous Android OEMs sprinkled throughout and instead caught that the
context of the article is about when those particular devices would be updated.
And then, it provided quick access links to learn more.
Using
Now on tap is so much easier than copying and pasting the location name into
Google Search App.
Now
on Tap works with third-party-applications, too. In Instagram, for instance,
you typically have to tap about two to three times open up the Google Maps app and
navigate to a location where you friends have checked in. But with Now on Tap,
you can just hold down the Home button with the photo on screen and it offers
up a quick link to Street view. You tap that option, and then Google retrieves
an actual photo of the location in questions. It’s so much easier.
By
far, my favorite use for Now on Tap is when Google Now isn’t doing its job with
appointment reminders. I like to primp on the weekends, “and oftentimes I lose
track of when I’m getting my hair colored or when I’m due for a manicure. But
now when I’m in my email, I just hold down the Home button to quickly add an
appointment reminder to my calendar. It’s just two taps!
Now
on tap is on as long as you’ve opted into it. Just like you did with Google Now
when you first logged in to your device. The idea is that if you’re using
Google Phone/ then Google’s search engine should be the one you turn to for
more context my life is seriously so much easier because of it, and I no longer
have to copy words and things just to paste them into other apps.
MAKE YOUR OWN DECISIONS WITH PERMISSIONS
Applications
permission have become a bit of an emotionally – charged topic over the years.
In Android 4.3, Google Introduced app ops to try to help users figure out which
apps were being overly intrusive, though it was quickly pulled because it rendered
some applications useless. Currently, if you don’t like that an application has
access to a sensitive part of your OS, your only option is to opt out of
installing it. This is pretty limiting.
Marshmallow
solves this dilemma with individual application permissions. The Play Store no
longer ask you to agree to all permissions before you can install an app.
Instead, the app will query you when it wants access to a part of your device –
like the camera, for instance – and it’s up to you to decide whether or not to
allow it. If you deny it, any feature that rely on that permission won’t work.
But the rest of the app will.
The
idea that you have control over Android as your personal operating system is no
longer an illusion. Application permissions are useful precisely because they offer
context when an app needs access to something. Permissions might also help
instill a new found sense of confidence in those users who might have otherwise
been on the fence about sticking with Android because of the latest security woes,
though they’re not a failsafe against major vulnerabilities like Stage fright.
A BETTER BACKUP SOLUTION – SUPPOSEDLY
Android’s
been a particularly bad operating system for those who often jump between
devices. I can attest that before Tap & Go was introduced in Lollipop, it
was a serious pain in the ass to swap SIM cards between review devices.
While
Tap & Go has made it easier to get your apps onto a new device, the data
contained within those apps don’t come along for the ride. And though android
has had a backup solution in place since Froyo, it’s never quite worked as well
as it should have.
Marshmallow
offers Auto backup and, supposedly, it works – I write this with some skepticism
because I haven’t been able to test it fully. This is an issue Ron Amadeo’s had
at Ars Technica, and we even discussed it at length on Episode 234 of all about
Android. I’ve noticed that Marshmallow is backing up some applications, but I
haven’t actually done a full restore to test its backup abilities. And that’s
because it’s not backing up much save for a few Google apps and Podkicker Pro, randomly.
But
here’s how it works: Marshmallow takes all application data, including user –
generated elements like accounts and preferences, and uploads it all into
Google Drive. It stores all your call logs and Wi-Fi passwords, too, and none
of that data will count toward your drive storage quota. By default, automatic
backups will occur every 24 hours once the device is idle and connected to
Wi-Fi. You can then check on your backup data through the Google Drive app,
though you can’t individually manage what data is stored and which application
are backed up.
The
backup only work with Marshmallow devices currently which is confusing
considering Google will be updating the API through Google Play Services. Overall,
it doesn’t seem like this feature is fully baked yet, so I’ll have to report
back after a bit of time with it.
DOZE PUTS YOUR BATTER TO SLEEP
Although
it sounds like brand of cough syrup, Doze is actually Marshmallow’s new and
fantastic battery – saving feature. When you leave your phone or tablet alone
on a desk or kitchen table into a hibernation mode of sorts to hold on to
whatever battery power it has left. Network access and background processes are
batched together and run infrequently, with only high priority tasks running as
usual. Once you turn the screen on, all the notifications will come blasting at
you at once, like your device’s been revived from the dead. It’s an amazing
feature and I was thoroughly impressed by how little energy the Nexus 6 burned
through the night, With Wi-Fi- on, it inly used up two percent of its batter
life, and with LTE on, it only ate through ten percent.
Doze
uses the accelerometer to determine when to go to sleep, so it won’t kick in if
you’re walking to work or driving. It need to stay still in one spot for a
period of time before it starts. High priority messages from app like Google
Hangouts will still come through, though, which will keep the device from going
to sleep unless you snooze notification also, Google has given developers the
ability to choose whether or not their app’s notifications can push through
Doze mode. Here’s to hoping you won’t start getting notifications for silly things
like a bonus coin offer in Pokemon Shuffle when your device should be resting
up.
APP STANDBY: A NEW WAY TO SHUT OFF BLOATWARE
I have serious
Stockholm syndrome with Verizon Wireless. I love My Big Red’s coverage. And its
customer service has actually been pretty decent over the years, but the
carrier keeps bundling in all these awful applications on the non – stock
Android devices I bring home. I’ll disable them, but sometimes they still
managed to rear their ugly head on the next restart.
App
standby is supposed to help with this annoying conundrum. It’s setting you can
tinker with in Marshmallow’s Develop options that lets you essentially deactivate
applications so that they remain dormant. I wouldn’t recommend using it unless you’re
really confident about tweaking Android, though this little feature could prove
to be really helpful for those who are suffering from serious lag on third-
party Android Phones.
There
are other options you can use, too, to adjust the way applications work on your
device. Marshmallow lets you choose minute you leave it for another, or you can
processes should run at the same time. I like the idea of these settings being
available for all Android users, but I’m curious to see how they will work on
Third-Party Android Devices once they receive their software updates.
SYSTEM UI TUNER IS NOT A THEMING ENGINER
I
regret to report that the system UI tuner is not particularly amazing. To turn
it on, you have to hold down the system settings icon in the Quick Settings
drop down and then wait for the confirmation that you’ve enabled System UI
tuner. Then you’ll find the option at the very bottom of the Settings page.
From here, you can customize which titles show up in the Notifications shade,
which icons show up in the Status bar, and whether or not you want the battery
percentage embedded inside the top-right battery icon. It’s nice to have these
few minor customization options available, but I was hoping for somethings
little more granular.
FINALLY A FULL BLOWN FINGERPRINT API
Fingerprint scanner on Android devices are nothing particularly new, Samsung has them, HTC’s had them, and even Motorola’s had them in the past, but it’s high time that Android has its own Native fingerprint API, because now developers can easily pop it into their apps to use for things like mobile payments.
At
present, only the Nexus 6P and 5X feature Marshmallow’s fingerprint API, so
we’ll report back on how it works once we get those devices in for review However,
I’m Particularly Curious about whether or not Samsung, LG, HTC, and the rest of
the gang will implement the new API or stick to their own.
MARSHMALLOW WILL LEAVE YOU WANTING S’MORE
We
don’t give Android Oses a star rating because they change significantly through
updates, and are substantially altered by most hardware manufacturers, anyways.
Which
brings me to my next point: although these new little bits and pieces of
Marshmallow make Android better than is now, I’m not particularly blown away by
what’s on offer. Sure, it’s exciting to have new software features to look
forward tom but Android’s Story needs to change a bit before we can get back to
that. Android has a problem, and that problem is third-party manufacturers. I
would love nothing more than to rave about how wondrous Google Now on Tap is,
or how helpful individual application permissions will prove in the long run,
but I’m too distracted by the fact that I have no idea when Samsung or Verizon
will seed it to my Galaxy S6 Edge. I don’t even know if Samsung will implement
all the features I covered here.
Regardless,
Marshmallow is a great indicator of how far Android has come as mobile
operating system. It’s the world’s dominant OS and it’s finally looking and
acting like it. I’m also liking the seeds Google’s sowing with regards to how
much information you can find about your device in the Settings menu. It feels
like the more transparent Android becomes, the more users will feel like they
really do have total control.
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