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Android Google

Google Launches Android Q Beta 1 (venturebeat.com) 33

Google said today it is rolling out the first beta version of Android Q, the newest version of its mobile operating system. The company will roll out a stable version of Android Q later this year. From a report: The first beta includes a preview SDK for developers with system images for the Pixel, Pixel XL, Pixel 2, Pixel 2 XL, Pixel 3, Pixel 3 XL, and the official Android Emulator. This is the fourth year running that Google has released the first developer preview of the next Android version in March -- Android N (later named Android Nougat), Android O (Android Oreo), and Android P (Android Pie). For the past two years, Google did not use the Android Beta Program, which lets you get early Android builds via over-their-air updates on select devices.

That changes with Android Q -- Google is making the first preview available as a beta, not just as a developer preview. That signals that it is ready for early adopters to try, in addition to developers. As before, this preview version will be referred to as Android Q until Google picks a name starting with that letter.

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Google Launches Android Q Beta 1

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  • Pie restricts scans to a very small number, which negatively affects network scanners. It was allegedly done to preserve battery life, but surely there is a better way.

  • I wish AOSP would have some boring, but needed stuff. A standardized busybox, access to the Linux firewall, root available, a way to backup/archive app data via ADB, so restoring a phone is easier, or you can just move your saved games off to save space and load them on later (or possibly to a different device.) As of now, data backups on Android are extremely hit or miss, it would be nice to have a standard of packing up an app's data and sending it off. Titanium Backup handles this admirably... but req

    • access to the Linux firewall, root available, a way to backup/archive app data via ADB, so restoring a phone is easier, or you can just move your saved games off to save space and load them on later (or possibly to a different device.) As of now, data backups on Android are extremely hit or miss, it would be nice to have a standard of pa https://xender.pro/ [xender.pro] https://discord.software/ [discord.software] https://omegle.onl/ [omegle.onl]
    • You can get that stuff on any rootable phone, so there are at least options. And there's Busybox Pro.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    If you opt out of location tracking on Android, Google still tracks you.

    I expect at some point that if you turn off tracking on an Android device, it'll mean what it says: "Turn off."

    For some reason Google is having trouble understanding that basic idea.

  • extra big notch.
  • From the article:

    "Connectivity permissions, privacy, and security: For Bluetooth, cellular, and Wi-Fi, the FINE location permission will be required. Wi-Fi standard support, WP3 and OWE, will also be included to improve security for home and work networks as well as open/public networks."

    So does that mean that if an app needs Wi-Fi, then I will now have to give it fine location permissions? So any app that requires Wi-Fi can now also access GPS?

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