If there are too many notification cards to fit the screen, after the list of cards there are app icons that indicate queued notifications. The Notifications and Quick Settings shades are traditional Android Oreo ones. It has a Clear All button, supports app lock and split-screen mode. The Task Manager is accessed by tapping on the Menu button. A swipe up from the Home screen opens the list with applications which are listed on one screen in alphabetic order with a search bar above them. A swipe to the right from the Home screen opens the Shelf, which is a one-point access to most used contacts, widgets, info, whatever suits you. A swipe to the left leads to the second desktop with the same docked applications and the 1+ Community app plus the Settings shortcut above them. A swipe up from its bottom opens the Home screen, which contains Google search and Date/Weather widgets (both can be removed), a folder with all Google apps, Play Store and a docked row of apps. The Lock screen contains the usual shortcuts to the Voice search and Camera apps. As long as it concerns the UI and apps, they look quite familiar. Most of these optimizations are invisible. Caching is also used here and there to improve speed and add to the smooth experience. This saves processing power, increases loading times and apps perform faster. One of the latest optimizations to make the OS even faster is that the OnePlus 6 is taught to render only what's displayed directly on the screen. The Oxygen OS customizations are very subtle and the optimized software does add to the feeling that you're holding a super-fast smartphone. Of course, it had the May security patches. The most noteworthy change after the update is the appearance of the Slow-Motion mode in the Camera app. Our OnePlus 6 review unit arrived with Oxygen OS 5.1.0 and immediately received an update to Oxygen OS 5.1.5.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |