Android P

Android P will have notch support, improved indoor mapping

Life
Image: Google

8 March 2018

The first developer preview of Android P has arrived, and with it Google is ready to show off the next phase of its mobile vision. And notches are all the rage.

As previously rumoured, Android P will introduce display cutout support for Android apps, letting developers “take full advantage of the latest device screens with fullscreen content”. And it’s not just the status bar and home screen that will get the support. Google is expanding support for notched displays into all areas of Android P – including APIs – so developers can get creative with their apps.

According to Google, “Cutout support works seamlessly for apps, with the system managing status bar height to separate your content from the cutout. If you have critical, immersive content, you can also use new APIs to check the cutout shape and request full-screen layout around it”.

While the first phone with a notch was technically Andy Rubin’s Essential Phone, Apple mainstreamed the look with its bezel-less iPhone X. After a flurry of notched phones released and rumoured during Mobile World Congress this year, however, it’s clear that it will become a trend in 2018 and beyond. And with Android P, Google wants to ensure users are getting the best possible experience.

With support baked deep into the operating system, phone makers and app developers will actually use the full screen to their advantage, creating content that fits correctly and using the notch to add creative controls and data. So maybe we won’t hate them so much.

Moving pictures ahead
Along with notch support, Google is also readying Android for the next generation of photos and videos. Version P brings support for HDR VP9 Profile 2, so app developers will be able to deliver HDR-enabled movies from YouTube, Google Play, and other sources on HDR-capable devices. Several premium Android phones are already capable of receiving HDR10 and Dolby Vision content, including the Samsung Galaxy S9, LG V30, and Pixel 2, and Android P will only accelerate the availability of content.

Google is also adding high efficiency image format (HEIF) image format encoding into Android P. Developers will be able to take advantage of the compression and storage benefits of HEIF by offering the popular format as an option in their apps.

Additionally, Android P will embrace dual-camera systems, letting third party camera apps “access streams simultaneously from two or more physical cameras on devices running Android P”. That means developers will be able to do more with the second lens on dual-camera devices, letting them get creative with portraits, black and white, wide angle shots, and anything else the secondary camera provides.

Notifications, mapping, and more
It wouldn’t be a new version of Android without changes to the notification system, and Google has prioritised improved visibility and function in notifications in Android P. Messaging alerts should become more dynamic, highlighting who is sending a message and how to reply, as well as displaying full conversations, and letting you attach photos and stickers, all without opening the app.

Android P will also bring support for the IEEE 802.11mc Wi-Fi protocol (or Wi-Fi Round-Trip-Time) so apps will be able to bring location services indoor where GPS might be spotty. With Android P, apps will be able to calculate the device position with an accuracy of up to two meters, Google says. That kind of accurate indoor positioning will help apps with indoor mapping and location-based information.

Among the other changes in Android P will be expanded availability of Google’s neural network, improvements to Autofill, and support for the Open Mobile API for secure smartcard payments. There will also be improvements to security, app compatibility, and privacy, as well as the usual speed and power efficiency improvements.

The Developer Preview is available for manual download and Flash only, with the over-the-air Android Beta version arriving closer to the final release. As always, Google stresses that this is a baseline build for developers only and there will be more features and capabilities added later in the preview and at Google I/O in May.

IDG News Service

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