Android 5.0 Lollipop heralds a new era for the operating system, one
aimed at unifying the Android experience across devices and built with
business use squarely in mind. While iOS may have enjoyed early darling
status in the enterprise, expect business organizations to take Android
much more seriously going forward, thanks to a raft of significant
improvements, an extensive set of new developer APIs, and clear signals
that Google intends to lead the Android ecosystem more intentionally than ever before.
Lollipop is in many ways a re imagining of what Android can be,
and Google has rebuilt Android Lollipop from the ground up with the
future in mind. Injecting new support for faster and more efficient
hardware, Google has laid a strong foundation for developers and device
makers to take the platform to new heights in powering the next
generation of smartphones, tablets, and wearable s.
Lollipop
is currently rolling out to most Nexus-branded devices and some
Motorola and LG devices, and it's in the hands of device makers like
Samsung and HTC for testing and roll out in the coming weeks and months.
Here is a look at the improvements to Android Lollipop that make it the
most powerful and adaptable Android yet.
Simplified setup
With
Lollipop, Google has streamlined device setup, a welcome improvement
over previous versions of Android. Connect to a Wi-Fi or cellular network, and Android will automatically download any available updates
right out of the box, rather than waiting until the setup process is
complete as in versions past. With Lollipop installed, you’ll enter your
email address and password, then begin setting up your Google profile
on your new device. Android Lollipop’s setup process also now supports
NFC transfer which will allow you to tap your previous NFC-enabled
device to your new one to transfer your settings, apps, and profiles.
(Note: Over-the-air updates will still require manufacturer and carrier
approval.)
Android Lollipop’s most notable improvement to the
setup process is the ability to restore your device from a specific
backup. Rather than automatically downloading every app and setting
affiliated with your Google profile, Lollipop now allows you to restore
from a particular device’s profile. Simply choose your backup profile,
and you can handpick the apps associated with that profile that you want
to load to your updated device. This new feature is particularly handy
for those who use multiple Android devices, enabling them to keep
separate sets of apps on each device.
Material Design: A fresh, new unifying face
Lollipop introduces a complete and aptly named visual overhaul of the Android UI:
Material Design. Google’s reimagined look and feel for Android is more
vibrant, fluid, and cohesive than in previous versions. The impact of
Material Design can be felt throughout the entire OS, from its new
navigational buttons and reimagined menus all the way to Google’s
portfolio of stock apps. Thanks to this new unified aesthetic,
everything about the new Android looks and feels like it fits together
seamlessly.
Lollipop's Material Design makes the Android experience more intuitive. Tap and flick your way around Android Lollipop,
and you’ll quickly see that the “surfaces and edges” with “seams and
shadows” approach does in fact readily reveal what can be touched to
trigger actions, as Matias Duarte, Google’s vice president of design and
lead architect of Material Design, said at this year’s Google I/O.
This translates into richer, more colorful apps with vibrant
transitional animations and visual cues that make navigation more
intuitive. It also means a shallower OS, ditching the deep, often
confusing menus and rabbit holes of Android’s past and placing more of
what you need at the surface.
Google’s Material Design guidelines
give developers the tools to create a unified experience across device
sizes. It’s true that the Android tablet experience is in some measure
that of an enlarged phone, as some have suggested, but it is clear that
Google aims to improve this based on Lollipop’s developer guidelines.
This emphasis on uniformity is also in evidence in Google’s simultaneous
rollout of the Nexus 6 smartphone and the Nexus 9 tablet, enabling
developers to target the latest smartphone and tablet at the same time.
Material Design should extend that unified experience to wearables and
beyond.
Some
of Lollipop’s most notable improvements can be found among Android’s
central elements: its lock screen, notifications bar, and app drawer.
Android’s
new lock screen provides a quick view of unread notifications, which
can be swiped down to reveal more content, double-tapped to open, or
simply swiped away. You can control which notifications, if any, that
you would like to be displayed on the lock screen by navigating to the
Sounds and Notifications settings.
And if your device is locked with a PIN or password, you can
choose to show only the top line of a notification instead of its
sensitive content (defined by either the user or the app developer). As
in previous versions, the lock screen also provides direct access to the
notifications bar, camera, and the device’s various user profiles (more
on that in a bit).
Lollipop’s notifications bar can now be swiped
down once for a top-line view of your notifications and pertinent
Google Now cards or swiped down twice (alternatively, with two fingers
rather than one) to reveal Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and location settings,
along with toggles for airplane mode, rotation lock, and a flashlight.
The
notifications bar also contains a slider to control your display’s
brightness and a one-touch button to “cast” (aka share) your screen with
any compatible device (such as Chromecast) on the same Wi-Fi network.
In addition, the bar provides access to your device’s full settings menu
and user profiles.
Lollipop offers several Notifications enhancements to ease your ability to keep on top of important updates. Notifications have undergone a significant
overhaul. Android Lollipop now prioritizes notifications based on what
you will likely find most important. These prioritized notifications
always find their way to the top of the list, surpassing chronological
order in both the notifications bar and on the lock screen.
Lollipop
also introduces heads-up notifications -- visual “cards” that appear at
the top of your screen for certain real-time alerts that you can chose
to interact with or file away for later.
You can also now manage
which and when notifications appear through your device’s volume menu:
quickly toggle between displaying all notifications, priority
notifications, or no notifications at all. Alternately, dive deeper to
program specific times to display all information and other times to
display only certain information.
The new and improved app drawer feels more connected to the overall Android experience. Finally, Android’s app drawer has been given a
fresh coat of paint for the first time since Android 4.0 Ice Cream
Sandwich, so it seems more connected to your home screen, with a
folderlike look and feel, rather than spun off as an entirely separate
area of the OS. The app drawer is brighter, offering a white background
rather than a black or transparent one, and it is now limited to apps,
with access to widgets restricted to a long press on your home screen.
Recents: Reinventing multitasking
Google
invented mobile multitasking as we know it. With Android Lollipop, it
has pushed the concept further via Lollipop’s new Recents window, which
provides access to nearly all your apps rather than a handful of
recently used ones, and is now arranged in cards similar to those found
within Google Now. These cards scroll through a Rolodex-like motion,
providing a shrunken view of your multiple apps and windows. Lollipop's overhauled Recents takes mobile multitasking to a new level. The Recents UI goes deeper than Android’s
previous multitasking solutions, giving you the ability to not only
toggle between windows, but also between windows within windows. Suppose
you’re composing a message within Gmail; click the Recents button and
you’ll be able to access not only other apps but other aspects of Gmail,
such as your inbox. It works for Chrome, too, allowing you to toggle
between open tabs through the multitasking menu.
The
ability to toggle both between and within apps provides an entirely new
way to jump from one point to another within Android, drastically
cutting back on the amount of times you’ll click the Back button
throughout the UI.
Multiple-user profiles: Sharing the power of Android
Another
significant feature introduced with Lollipop is Device Sharing, which
enables Android Lollipop smartphones and tablets to support multiple
user profiles, similar to what Google introduced in Android 4.2 Jelly
Bean for tablets only. With Device Sharing, a family or a team of
business colleagues can share one device without having to share their
personal information.
There are three options for user profiles on a Lollipop-powered device:
An Owner account has access to the entire device and everything within it, as well as control over other profiles on the device.
A User account, on the other hand, has limited access to certain
apps and content controlled by the device’s main user, as well as
limited calling and SMS capabilities. A User account can, however,
download his or her own apps and customize certain settings that remain
limited to that profile.
Finally, there’s a Guest profile, which provides access to the core
functions of your phone or tablet, including calling, messaging, and
core Google apps. Guests can access their Google profiles to sync
contacts and even purchased apps, but all information is limited to one
session and is wiped upon exiting Guest mode. This is useful for those
times that you want to lend someone your phone but don’t want them
poking around your own personal messages, photos, call history, or other
sensitive information.
In
the same vein, you can now “pin” your screen, restricting access to a
sole app, window, or piece of content you want to share, thereby
preventing your guest from navigating away from the pinned element to
anything else on you device.
ART: Shaking up Android to the core
Lollipop’s
change log includes a plethora of under-the-hood tweaks, the most
substantial of which is an overhaul of Android’s core architecture, with
Android Run Time (ART) replacing the Dalvik VM. According to Google,
this shift has made Android considerably faster and more powerful.
(Various reviewers report that Android Lollipop doesn’t run slower on
older Android devices -- a welcome indicator that ART may in fact be
faster.)
Whereas Dalvik compiled and processed apps each time they
were opened, ART performs ahead-of-time processing, translating an
app’s source code on initial installation. The result, Google claims, is
device performance of up to four times than that of previous versions
with smoother, more visually rich applications that open and operate
more efficiently.
This performance boost was noticeable on my
Nexus 5 at the outset. As you begin to use Android Lollipop, you will
certainly realize that navigating the OS, transitional animations, and
app switching is far smoother than before.
Android Lollipop is
also the first version with 64-bit support, which Google claims will
bring desktop-class CPU performance to the OS. Android’s core
applications, including Chrome, Gmail, and Play Music, are now
64-bit-native, as is the Java engine that many third-party applications
are built on. The difference won’t likely be felt by users immediately,
as nearly all apps are still 32-bit, but it will allow hardware makers
to incorporate more powerful yet efficient processors, GPUs, and RAM
into the next generation of smartphones and tablets.
Popular on InfoWorld
Project Volta: Optimizing power use
When we first met
what was then referred to as Android L in June, one of the most exciting
and promising features was Project Volta, an initiative that Google
claimed would yield massive improvements in mobile battery efficiency.
First,
similar to a trick already used in Samsung, HTC, LG, and other Android
devices, is a new native power-saver mode that helps Lollipop devices
limit ravenous background data, haptic feedback, and the like to squeeze
extra life out of a nearly empty battery.
Behind the scenes,
Project Volta’s Job Scheduler API batches battery-intensive tasks and
schedules them for optimal times. Instead of completing each background
task immediately, Android can now put off certain functions until a
device is connected to Wi-Fi or a charger, thus reducing the number of
times the OS draws power from the battery.
Project Volta also
provides developers access to a battery historian, which illustrates how
and when apps use voltage, as well as how efficiently they’re doing so.
In
practice, you might not notice Project Volta right out of the box -- in
fact, multiple early reviews of the Nexus 6 and 9 have reported merely
average battery life -- but it holds exciting promise once developers
and hardware makers begin utilizing its tools.
Enhanced security and Android for Work
Lollipop
heralds the first iteration of Android built with enterprise use
squarely in mind. Thanks to improved security features such as default
encryption on new devices, contextually aware device unlocking, and
Security Enhanced Linux (SELinux) malware protection, devices running
Android Lollipop are now more enterprise-friendly than ever.
Among
the security enhancements is Lollipop Smart Lock, a feature that allows
you to associate one or more Bluetooth devices (aka Trusted Devices) as
automatic unlocks, such as your key fob in your pocket. Smart Lock also
includes Trusted Faces, a previously available feature that uses facial
recognition to unlock a device. Look for it now in the Smart Lock group
in Settings. Also of interest is the newly available Trusted Locations,
which enables you to set locations where your phone could be left open
for easy access, such as at home or the office. Trust Locations is
currently available through Google Play Services, as opposed to Lollipop
itself, so you may need to download and install it yourself.
Most exciting, though, is Android for Work, a dual-persona system Google acquired from Divide last spring that also is said to include Samsung's Knox
technology. Google’s Android for Work keeps work and other sensitive
data separated from your personal information and media. When Android
for Work becomes available in mobile management servers some time next
year, IT personnel will be able to deploy apps in bulk to business-user
devices and maintain centralized control over sensitive functions.
Google’s Android for Work is built around three major concepts:
device and data security, support for IT policies, and mobile
application management. Lollipop implements its multiuser support to
create a behind-the-scenes user profile that employs block-level disk
encryption to keep sensitive data protected, similar to Samsung’s
approach with Knox’s Workspace or BlackBerry’s Balance. With Lollipop’s new enterprise-friendly APIs, IT admins will have more tools than ever to configure system and application settings and restrictions.
Android
for Work is part of Android Lollipop, and Google says it will be
available as an app for devices running Android 4.0 and later as well.
Several mobile management vendors promise support for it.
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