No matter how you slice it, Android allows the most tinkering and
twisting out of all the mobile operating systems floating out there.
Take its famed multitasking, for instance, which queues tens of open
apps in the background, so you can freely pick, choose and swap between
them.
Or take its widget system, which can put every
app action you need on the homescreens, so you can even forget that the
app drawer existed. Well, iOS has a similar multitasking now, and it
performs pretty well on the new iPhones, not to mention that Apple
opened the notification center for 3rd party widgets of sorts. Even Windows Phone is rumored to introduce split-screen multitasking built into the core. What's a Google to do then?
Well, judging from this leaked demo, and some rumors flying around, Android L
might introduce something similar to Samsung's Multi-window, or LG's
Dual Window modes, or at the very least something in the realm of Sony's
Small Apps suite, LG's Qslide, or Samsung's Pop-up view mode. The first
one splits the screen in two, so you can run separate apps at once,
while the second hovers the apps in small windows over the top of the
interface, so you can use your calculator or notes while browsing a
website, for instance.
That second scenario, with the floating apps, seems to be what's running on a Nexus 7
tablet in a video posted by the source link below, and the windowed
apps are the default Google+ and Photos ones, suggesting that this
feature might be built into Android L, and ultimately make its way on
each and every phone running the latest Android version. Ot,
alternatively, it might be just a bug, and we are all getting worked up
for nothing, we'll see next week, when Google and HTC are supposed to take the stage, and announce the availability of Android L, first on the alleged Nexus 9 tablet, and then rolling all over the green robot universe.
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