Android 11 release date,features,beta

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Android 11 release date?

Android 11 name: What will it be called?

Android 11 features:

Messaging improvements:









Android 11 introduces new permissions:









Support for new screens:

5G support:

Android 11 beta program:

Android 11 is coming later this year — here’s what to expectA new year brings a new Android update, and Google is hard at work prepping Android 11. The latest version of Google’s mobile operating system arrives later this year, bringing a host of new features to all the Android phones and tablets out there.Just what those features are, though, is still emerging. We've just seen a few developer previews of Android 11 — the first one in February followed by a second release in March — which means a lot of the enhancements Google is talking about publicly are aimed more at app makers than at end users. We expect to hear a lot more about Android 11 and what it will mean for your smartphone before the full version comes out toward the end of summer.Here's everything we know about Android 11 so far, including new features and availability.Google released its first developer preview of Android 11 on Feb. 19. That's pretty early in relation to past Android rollouts — last year, the first beta for Android Q (before it became known as Android 10) debuted on March 13. Of course, that release was a beta aimed at an audience that included early adopters as well as developers. Google has stressed that this Android 11 developer preview is really aimed at app makers for testing purposes and not something consumers will want to install on their every day phone.According to an Android 11 overview that Google posted at its developer site, we can expect additional developer previews of Android 11 in March and April. A second developer preview popped up on March 18, so Google's on track so far with Android 11 development.The first beta for Android 11 — which presumably will be intended for a wider audience — is currently slated for May. That would have coincided with Google I/O, Google's annual developer conference, but that event was cancelled due to the coronavirus outbreak. Google had said it will hold its developer get-together online, but now that event is off, too.We'd still expect more details about Android 11 — and most likely a public beta — to come later in the spring, based on Google's current schedule.That same schedule of Android 11 releases promises a final release in the third quarter of 2020. That's in line with recent Android updates. Android 10 arrived on Sept. 3 last year, while Android 9 Pie landed on Aug. 6, 2018. The year before that Android Oreo debuted on Aug. 21. We'd expect Android 11 to get finalized in that August-September time frame.Old-school Android users — well, those that were around prior to last year — may remember Google's penchant for naming its mobile operating system after desserts. Prior to Pie and Oreo, we were treated to such names Nougat, Marshmallow, Lollipop and Kit Kat.That changed with Android Q/Android 10, either because Google wanted to signal a new approach for its mobile OS or because coming up with a Q-named dessert proved too taxing, even for Google's extensive knowledge graph. Whatever the reason, the current version of Android is simply Android 10 and there's no reason to believe Android 11 is going to go back to the dessert naming convention. (If it does, we're up to Android R.)Expect a detailed look at Android 11 in whatever form the new Google I/O takes, with other details on what's new with Android 11 trickling out between now and then. But based on the developer tools introduced in the first two Android 11 preview, we can get a sense of some of the consumer-facing features that will show up in the full release.Google has detailed a number of changes surrounding conversations, suggesting that chat improvements will be a major focus in Android 11. For starters, the updated OS is emphasizing chat bubbles — these will keep ongoing conversations in a handy container that you can tap to access from anywhere on your phone. There's a Bubbles API in the Android 11 preview, which suggests that third-party apps are going to be able to offer this feature as well.You'll also be able to access conversations from Android 11's notification shade, which is adding a dedicated section for conversations. Another developer tool will let apps with copy and paste functionality add the ability to let users insert images when they reply to messages from the notification shade.One-time permissions: Android 11 will continue to fine-tune permissions, adding an "Only this time" option that will give apps momentary access to things like location tracking, the microphone and the camera. In this scenario, when you stop using the app, the permission expires. It's a level of granularity that iOS users already enjoy, so it's good to see that come to Android.Android 11 will apparently expand on a feature in Android 10 that allowed users to give apps location data only when they were actively being used. That same feature looks like it's being extended to the camera and the microphone based on the second developer preview.You may have noticed a variety of displays finding their way onto Android devices, from foldable screens to panels with cut-outs for the front camera. Android 11 is adding tools that will let app makers optimize their software for these different displays.Specifically, Android 11 is gaining the ability to detect the angle of the hinge in a foldable phone, so that app behavior can change accordingly. Think about the Samsung Galaxy Z Flip and its Flex mode, in which the top half of the screen becomes a viewing area, and the bottom half includes app's controls. It sounds like other foldable phones will be able to support similar features.With 5G wireless networks now up and running, Google is taking steps to make sure that its mobile OS is able to take full advantage of the faster speeds and lower latency that 5G promises. A Dynamic meteredness API in Android 11 will be able to check to see if a 5G cellular connection is unmetered; if so, your phone will be able to get higher resolution images and video. Another 5G-related API makes it easier for apps to downstream and upstream bandwidth. In the second developer preview, Google added the ability for apps to detect the kind of 5G network a phone is connected to, so that the phone's performance can be adjusted accordingly.Faster screen refresh rates: In Android 11, apps and games will be able to set a preferred refresh rates. That will allow games to take advantage of phones with displays that sport faster refresh rates, which should make for an enhanced gaming experiences.Improvements aimed at streaming services: More things are streaming these days, including Google's own Stadia gaming service. In Android 11, the first frame of a stream will appear as quickly as possible once decoding starts, which should improve performance for services like Google Stadia.Call screening improvements: Google says it's adding APIs that will allow call-screening apps to do a better job handling robocalls.Unless you happen to be a developer working on apps that will run on Android 11, you definitely should not. As the list of features makes clear, the Android 11 developer preview is putting the emphasis on under-the-hood improvements, with the major changes right now aimed at providing app makers with tools to get their products ready for Android 11's final release. If that description doesn't apply to you, you're not likely to get much out of using Android 11 right now — and you certainly shouldn't install the developer preview on anything other than a spare phone or test device.How to get it, To run the latest developer preview of Android 11, you'll need to have a Pixel 2 or later. (In recent years, Google opened up the Android beta to other phones besides the ones it makes, but that's not going to happen until a more stable beta is ready.) From there, you need to download and flash a device system image to your Pixel.That process is a bit more complex than simply downloading an over-the-air update. You'll need to make sure that both developer settings and USB debugging are turned on for your target device, and you'll need to unlock the phone's bootloader, too. Developers should be able to do all that without any sweat, but it's not something that regular users are likely to have done before.