finally time for Google to dowhat it does at every Google aisle lately,tell us what all the new features that are comingto the next version of Android actually are,and we ve got;em right here on this phone.

  • There new gestures.
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  • There new notification stuff.
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  • There always that kind of stuff,but Google doing some other thingsthat they don do every year.

So for example, there a new way to get OS updates,and there an amazing feature called live caption.
Let check it out.

So the first features to talk aboutare probably the ones that most people are gonna notice,and maybe even be the most excited about.

Number one, fan favorite, everyone been waiting.

There is finally a dark theme.

You just pull down the notification shade.

You tap that dark theme button,and ta-da, it  in dark theme.

The thing to notice about dark themeis it has true proper black,so that will help save battery life.

If you turn on battery saver,it defaults to turning on the dark theme.Also, a bunch of Google apps are gonna support it natively,so for example, photos, dark theme.

We can go and look at calendar.

Now you may have noticedwhen I was showing you all those dark theme appsthat I was getting around the OSin a completely different way.There was a new gestural navigation system.

Google will try to take a baby steptowards it with Android P.With Android Q, it\ finally going all the way,and it not that different from how an iPhone works,so if you inside an app, you swipe up, it takes you home.

Pretty basic.

If you  home and you swipe up,it takes you to the app drawer.But you notice that all you see on the bottomof this thing is just a little white bar,so how do you go back?

Well, you swipe in from either side of the screen,anywhere on the side of the screen,so if I just swipe in from the edge of the screen,that serves as a back button.Swipe in from the right edge of the screen,the arrow shows up, that serves as a back button,and that new back gesture is interestingbecause a lot of Android appshave a app drawer over on the left,and now they gonna have to decide if they wantthe first swipe to open up the drawer or to just go back.

They can decide that app by app.

Now, if you want to do multitasking,you got a couple of options.

You can still just quickly swipe along the bottomof where that little home button lozenge bar thing is,or you can swipe up and overto get into a proper multitasking viewwhere you can swipe between different apps.

So dark theme and the new gesture navigation system.It a thing you gonna notice.

A thing everyone probably most excited to talk about,but I don think they the most important thingsthat Google is doing in Android Q.

When it comes to Android updates,the biggest problem always just getting the updates.You never know if your phone is gonna get it.You gotta wait for all these approvals.

a mess, and every year,Google tries something a little bit different to fix it.

This year, they trying something really fascinating.Google is going to start delivering OS updates,specifically security and privacy updates,not really big giant feature updatesvia the Google Play store in the Google Play infrastructure.So I ask Steph Cuthbertson,the Director of Android to explain it to me.- Project Mainline is about enabling us to,especially for say those security sensitive updatesto deliver them to you very rapidly.In fact, as rapidly as I can update a Google app.

So let say for example,you got a security sensitive part of the OS,which is where this is particularly useful.Say media.With Mainline, we can nowdeliver those updates directly over the air.- If you don have a Google Play phone,say you in Chinaor you got some weird knockoff thing.You might miss out on that,although it is an open-source project,so it might also be able to help those phones too.

All that security stuff is great,but you probably wondering aboutthe big major feature updates,and whether or not they gonna come faster.- One of the things that we announcedin past years was Project Trouble,which is a great advance towards updating,updates and the release,and one of the things that we seeing with Android Qis the update rates have accelerated.In fact, for Q Beta Three, we gonna see 21 devicesfrom 13 OEMs all running Beta Three.- So that the update story on Android Q.

It a little bit of like they getting betteron getting it pushed out to more manufacturers faster,but the bigger deal is they gonna get thosesecurity updates pushed outmuch more quickly to much more phones.Google making privacy and securitya big part of its push for Android Q, and I don know,they gonna have something like40 or 50 different updates that are related to that,but the one that you probablymost likely to see is in settings,there a new top level privacy option,and that gives you a bunchof different controls for managing your data on your phone,and that includes both Google stuff,like clearing your Google location history,but also permissions on the phone itself.So if you go into the permission manager,it shows you all the different pieces of data you have.Microphone access, calendar access,call logs, all that stuff,and how many apps had access to it,and you can just dig in and turn off accessfor any app individually.- Location reminders are also a great feature,because you also maybe wondering now,which apps did I turn location on for?

I not sure I remember all of them,and what helpful with reminders is in Q,every app that accesses location in Q,it will remind you and say,look, do you want this app to have location access?

So you don have to wonder if there some apprunning in the background that has that access.- All those permissions and data privacy changesare super, super important,but they are still a few moreuser facing features to talk about.In notifications, if you get a messagefrom any messaging app,you see that there are these new buttonsyou can press to reply to it,and what happening here is Androidis actually locally on the device reading that message.

Nothing gets shared,and then figuring out how to reply to it.So there a context relevant replylike show a time or sure,or there a button for open map,so if it sees that there an address in there,you can just tap that open map,and it jump to the address inside Google Maps.Google able to do that because it figured outhow to do a bunch of local machine learningon Android itself right on the device,and there another thing that it can do that it just,it frankly flat-out amazing.

So I just gonna open up photos here.

I got a presaved video here from Google.Start watching it, a person here talking,but you can tap this buttonand once you hit the volume button,and it starts showing you a live captionof what being said on the video.

You can drag the caption around.Use a double tap to get more text on there.You can even resize it if you want to.What Android is doing is locally on the devicelistening to the video that being played,and then showing you a live captionof what is being said on the video,which is legitimately amazing,but also a real human goodif you deaf or hard-of-hearing,you got more access to more videosbecause you can use this in any app, it doesn matter.Also if you not,you can still just watch a videoand not annoy everybody else that  around youby turning the volume up.

There a new mode called focus modewhich is sort of like do not disturb, but not really.

Basically what you can do is you can say,I in focus mode now,and turn off these apps that annoy me,and then they get grayed out,and you can open them without a little popupsaying you don want to open this thing.

It exactly what I wantthe digital well-being app timers to be.It keeps you from opening them instead of waiting you run out of time when you use them too much,and speaking of that digital well-being app timer thing,Google is finally integratingits family link software into it,so it now combined app timers digital well-beingand parental controls all in the same spaceright built into the OS.

All right, so after all of that,what do I think of Android Q?

Well, we have to review it to know for sure,but I have two things to say right now.

The first is that a lot of the stuff,it just feels a little bit overdue.Better gestures, dark mode,and especially better permissionsare things that I wish Google had doneone, two, four, five years ago even.So I glad theyfinally here,but I wish they had come a little bit sooner.

The second thing is that Android Qdoesn have any big grandiose huge ideasabout what an operating system on a phone could be.Last year Android Pi had all the stuffabout slices and actions,blowing up apps, and exploding themall over the interface of the phone,but Q is a little bit more well,it honestly it iterative,and that iteration is super important,but I don think it gonna fundamentallychange the way that you think about your phone.

Hey everybody, thank you so much for watching.We got a ton more Google IO content,but I want to know in the comments,what do you think the Q should stand for?
I think it should stand for Quibble.-not a dessert.- You know what?Let not argue about silly things.