Gesture controls
Android Pie added a new way to control your device. In addition to the traditional three-button navigation bar at the bottom of the display, you can use the new gesture-based navigation system. After a short time getting used to it, it offers a faster and fluid user experience in daily life.
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How to activate navigation gestures on Android Pie. / © NextPit
To activate the gesture controls, head to Settings > System > Gestures > Swipe up on Home button.
Swipe up on the Home button to open a view of Recent apps. You can move left and right to check out the list, and swipe up to clear an app. Press and hold an app’s icon to see the Split screen option. You can even interact with apps in this form to select and copy text from one to another
Swipe up on the Home button twice to open the app drawer
Swipe right and hold on the Home button to slowly scroll between apps and release to open the one in the middle
Swipe right quickly and release to switch to the previous app
Press and hold the Home button to open Google Assistant as before
Prioritize notifications
Since Android 8.0 Oreo, the handling of notifications has been greatly improved. You can micro-manage all the different kinds of notifications the app can send, and set conditions that work for you. Here’s how:
Press and hold the app you want to change to bring up the menu
Open app info, then Notifications
Tinker with the checkboxes and options as you wish
Below we show an example with Facebook, a particularly notification-heavy app
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Fine tune your notification experience. / © AndroidiPIT
Supercharge your Wi-Fi
Did you know you can tell Chrome to save time and money by reducing data usage? Most people don’t. By using this setting, I’ve cut my data usage by 30 percent in the past month. How’s that for easy savings?
Go to Chrome > Settings > Data Saver and turn it on
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Everyone should tell Chrome to compress web pages before downloading them. / © NextPit
Likewise, did you know you can tell your phone to keep Wi-Fi on during sleep?
Just go to Settings > Wi-Fi > Advanced
Click on Keep Wi-Fi on during sleep
Select Always
Doing this means that not only will you download things while your phone’s display is off, but you will also save battery life, because your phone won’t have to reconnect to Wi-Fi every time you wake it up.
How to boost your phone’s Wi-Fi signal
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The Advanced Wi-Fi Settings is a great place to save time, money and battery life. / © NextPit
Optimize your battery
No matter which Android device you have, there are ways to improve the battery life from the get-go. Firstly, you should turn off ‘ambient display’ or ‘adaptive brightness’. This setting changes the display brightness based on the current lighting conditions, but it’s not perfect.
The sensor used to determine the light levels is not as accurate as the human eye, you can set a more appropriate display brightness for the current circumstances, and as the display is a key area where battery life is lost, make sure you keep this at the lowest level possible.
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Make sure you disable ambient display, and use a battery saving function when necessary. / © NextPit
Additionally, all of the major Android UIs come with some form of battery saving mode. While the strengths of each vary, they are worth digging into to see how they can be best applied for your particular needs. For example, Sony’s Stamina mode alters very little in terms of performance and it’s one of those you can (and probably should) have enabled at all times.
The stock Android battery-saving function affects performance and app functionality quite heavily, so it might worth considering using this only when it’s essential. HTC’s Power Saver, on the other hand, has several options that you can enable or disable within it, making it a little less rigid than the others.
Investigate the battery functions on your device by going into the settings and looking for battery, power or something similar.
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HTC’s Power saver mode (left) and Sony’s Stamina mode. / © NextPit
Grant app permissions individually
This is something that has been available since Android Marshmallow. It has a cool feature you should try: granular app permissions. This feature allows you to give apps permission to access hardware or data on your phone on a need basis. So if an app needs to access the microphone, it’ll ask you for permission to do so when you launch the app and the app needs to use this piece of hardware.
For Android versions before Marshmallow, you had to grant that permission before downloading the app in the Play Store. We assumed that denying some app permissions within third-party apps could break them. But now you can manage these permissions individually. Give it a try.
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You can view and toggle permissions for an individual app. / © NextPit
Use Google Assistant, enable always listening
You’re probably familiar with Google Assistant, which you can use to retrieve information quickly and easily. But it’s also so much more than that: Google Assistant can interact with your apps, take notes, set reminders along with a whole bunch of other clever tricks.
The more you use Google Assistant the more you realize what an excellent service it is. To give a simple example, say you wish to take an afternoon nap, but are already in that sleepy state and about to nod off. You don’t need to reach for your phone and open your clock app, calculate the time you want to wake and set an alarm for then. Just say “Okay Google, wake me up in two hours.”
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Tap OK Google detection and select ‘Always on’. / © NextPit
You can even set it to work from any screen by going into Google Settings > Search > Voice > OK Google detection > and selecting Always on.
We’ve listed more than 100 Google Assistant voice commands for you to use – give them a try.
Set up Find my Device
How Find My Device is not pre-enabled on every single Android phone I simply don’t know. Find my Device is a great tool that lets you track a lost or stolen phone, remotely lock it, ring it, or delete its contents and even display a lock screen message for anyone that finds it. It may not be the sexiest thing you do with your Android phone, but it should be the first thing you do.
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Give Find my Device the power to lock or erase your data in case of loss or theft. / © NextPit
You’ll find the permissions for Find my Device in the Google Setting app under Security. You can enable it to remotely locate your phone as well as lock or erase its contents. But you’ll also need to activate it as a device administrator.
Go to Settings > Security > Device Administrators
Check the box next to Find My Device
Find My Device
Install on Google Play
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Ensure find my device is enabled / © NextPit
Save time with NFC
Many people don’t even realize what NFC is, how it works or what it can do for you. But NFC is brilliant. A single tap can pair your Bluetooth headphones to your phone, transfer all of the contents of your old phone to a new one, or even send a default message to a contact when you walk in the door at home. For more information about it, click below:
What is NFC and why you should use it
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Transfer information faster by using NFC / © NextPit
Some guy even implanted an NFC chip in his hand so he’d never have to unlock his phone again. You don’t have to go that far, but an NFC-equipped device and a pack of NFC tags will change your life and save you tons of time. NFC is one of the coolest and underrated things to do with your Android.
Digital Well-being
Introduced with Android 9 Pie, these new features aim to save you from yourself, or more charitably, effectively balance the human-device relationship in a healthy way. If you ever worry about smartphone addiction or wasting time with aimless scrolling, then this can really help you out.
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Digital Wellbeing is designed to make users aware of how to use their smartphone. / © NextPit
The dashboard shows you how many notifications apps send you, how much time you spend in apps, and how often you check your phone. You can also set daily time limits to keep yourself from wasting hours in time-sinking apps.
Source: https://www.nextpit.com/everyone-should-do-this-with-their-android-phone
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