Android 8.0 OREO ( Look and Feel )
Look and feel :
You can't really say that there's a big difference in this area between the new Android release and Nougat, but there are some notable changes nevertheless. Perhaps the most obvious one has to do with the Quick Settings area, and specifically its background color. This is now a light grey, which blends in much better with other UI elements such as the Settings menu.Subjectively, it feels more professional-looking than the dark grey of years past, but the fact that the Quick Settings icons themselves are now black when the function they depict is enabled will take a little bit of getting used to. The battery percentage is now shown to the left of the battery icon in the status bar, not inside it, greatly improving readability.
Upon the initial swipe down from the top you'll notice that the date has been moved under the row of six most used Quick Settings icons, to the left. At the same level, on the right is where the Settings shortcut now lives, and to the right of that there's a small arrow that will expand the entire Quick Settings area when tapped. Of course, you can still accomplish the same effect by simply swiping down again.
While you're there, you'll see that the Edit shortcut for rearranging Quick Settings tiles has appeared just to the left of the Settings gear, and to the left of that is a handy user selector which lets you pick from the defined ones and guest mode, also allowing for the quick addition of a new user.
On Google's Pixels you have the same Pixel Launcher greeting you on your home screen as before, since this is an app that gets updated through the Play Store, independently of Android releases. Likewise you're stuck with the ancient Google Now Launcher on the Nexuses that will receive Oreo. We'll focus on the Pixel Launcher here because it's the newer (and still updated) app.
While it may not have been upgraded by Oreo per se, the new OS version brings a new launcher-related feature - namely notification dots - and this is obviously supported in Google's own Pixel Launcher. More on this in the next page of the review, which is all about notifications.
A couple of other subtle changes have been enabled in the Pixel Launcher on Oreo: when you're in the app drawer, the navigation buttons turn black, and you can now swipe up anywhere on the homescreen to bring up the app drawer - you no longer have to 'grab' the app dock at the bottom to achieve this effect.
If you like widgets, you'll be happy to know that you no longer have to scroll through endless lists of those in order to get to the one you want - in Oreo if you long press an app's icon you can then choose to see only that app's widgets by tapping a new button that's to the left of the Info icon. Adding widgets to the home screen in this manner has the potential to be much faster than the older method of long pressing an empty area (which still works, by the way).










No comments