
Just downloaded One UI 7? Here are two settings to change immediately
If you bought a Samsung phone within the last few years, there's a very good chance you received an update to One UI 7. And if not, it should be hitting your device any minute now. Samsung started widely rolling out its update to numerous devices late last week, including the Galaxy S22 series, Galaxy S21 series, Galaxy Z Fold 4, Galaxy Z Flip 4, and more.
For the most part, One UI 7 is a significant upgrade over previous versions. It's smoother, has greatly improved animations, and there's (finally) a vertical app drawer — just as God intended. But as much as One UI 7 gets right, there are two changes that can quickly prove headache-inducing.
If you've just updated to One UI 7, here are two settings you should change immediately to make the update even better.
Which One UI 7 setting are you changing first?
0 votes
The split design for the quick settings/notification panel
NaN %
Lock screen notification icons
NaN %
Other (let us know in the comments)
NaN %
The split design for notifications and quick settings
Joe Maring / Android Authority
This is one of the biggest user-facing changes in One UI 7 and, arguably, one of the most polarizing.
In One UI 6 and most Android interfaces, your quick settings and notifications appear on the same page. When you swipe down from the top of your screen or your home screen, you have some quick settings toggles at the top, and your notifications below them. In One UI 7, however, this is not the case.
By default, One UI 7 shows your notifications and quick settings on two separate pages. When you swipe down from the left or middle top of the screen, you see only your notifications. Swipe down from the top right corner, and you see only your quick settings. Even more annoying, no matter where you swipe down on your home screen, you can only view your notifications. It's a jarring change, and while you may grow to like it, you may also want to return to the old design. Thankfully, you can. Swipe down from the top right corner of your screen to view your quick settings.
Tap the pencil icon near the top right.
near the top right. Tap Panel settings in the top left corner.
in the top left corner. Tap Together.
Just like that, you're back to the old design. Now, no matter where you swipe down — from the top of your screen or the home screen — you'll see your quick settings at the top and any notifications below them. You can return to the new split design if you ever want to give it another chance, but I don't blame you one bit for sticking with the old design.
Missing notifications on your lock screen
Joe Maring / Android Authority
This second setting is a bit less obvious at first because, by default, you may not notice it at all. If you've updated to One UI 7 and realize you aren't seeing any notifications on your lock screen, you aren't going crazy, and your friends aren't suddenly leaving you out of the group chat.
Out of the box, One UI 7 only shows notifications on the lock screen as tiny icons in the upper left corner of the status bar. You can tap those icons to see them in detail, but it's impossible to glance at your lock screen to see, specifically, what notifications you may have missed. It's a bonkers design choice, but thankfully, you can change it. Here's how: Open the Settings app.
app. Tap Notifications .
. Tap Lock screen notifications .
. Under Notification style, tap Cards to change it from Icons.
Once you do this, your lock screen will show full notification cards/details. My friend Will Sattelberg first pointed this out in January, and all these months later, it still blows my mind that Samsung thought this was a good decision.
A couple of changes go a long way
Ryan Haines / Android Authority
There are plenty more settings to mess with in One UI 7, but having used the software for the last few months on the Galaxy S25 and S25 Ultra, these are the two that I think most people will want to change right away.
If you've got One UI 7, are you going to change these things? Have you already? What other settings are you messing with? Sound off in the comments below and let us know!

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Forbes
6 minutes ago
- Forbes
Why Modern CEOs Need Marketing Smarts And Tech Vision
Phil Portman is a serial entrepreneur and the Founder & CEO of Textdrip — a small business SMS marketing tool to automate SMS campaigns. Today, we live in a digital-first world where the role of the CEO is no longer just about managing operations or reporting to shareholders. The most successful CEOs today wear multiple hats, and the two most important roles are those of a marketer and a tech leader. It is because business is no longer just about making great products or services. It's about telling captivating stories that resonate and connect with people, and making strategic decisions powered by technology. So, if you're a CEO and you're not thinking like a marketer or acting like a tech leader, you're most likely falling behind. Let's break this down to help you understand. Think like a marketer: Lead with empathy and storytelling, and prioritize your customers. These days, marketing is not about the "last mile" of business; it is all about the first conversation. It is how people discover you, trust you and choose you. Therefore, as a CEO, you need to think like a marketer. Start with people, not with a product. It is the first sign of a great marketer. Ask yourself a few questions like: • Who are we serving? • What problems are they facing? • What emotions drive their decisions? As a CEO, you must adopt this mindset. Whenever you're making any decisions, such as launching a new product, entering a new market or acquiring a company, ask yourself: How does this decision serve our audience better? Ultimately, what matters most is solving real human problems, as this drives growth. Companies that tell clear stories win. For example, companies like Apple, Nike and Tesla do not just sell products; they sell a vision. It is marketing in action. So, whether you're speaking to your investors, customers or your team, your message must be clear and consistent. You're not just selling a product, you're also shaping perception and trust. Marketing always teaches to embrace customer obsession. As a CEO, you should also do the same. From the product design to user support, every touchpoint is important. The best CEO is the one who actively engages with their customers, reads reviews, responds on social media and attends customer roundtables. Do you know why? It is because growth comes from listening more than talking. Act like a tech leader: Stay curious, adopt fast and think digital. Technology is the heart and soul of modern business. It is not only about having the latest tools, but it is about how you think. Therefore, CEOs need to act like tech leaders. Let's understand what it means. The question these days is not whether your business needs digital transformation, but rather how fast it needs to happen. Tech leaders understand that digital is no longer a department, but it is the way of operating. Every day, new tools are emerging. From cloud systems to automations and AI, nowadays, technology is rapidly evolving and beneficial. However, it requires leadership buy-in. So, the CEO must drive this change instead of delegating it. When the CEO gives importance to digital and emaphasizes building smarter workflows, the entire organization will follow suit. Tech leaders can easily adopt the change. They iterate quickly, launch fast, test often and are not afraid to pivot. This kind of agility is essential for CEOs. We live in a world of constant disruption, including AI, Web3, climate tech and automation. As a CEO, you don't need to be a developer, but you need to understand enough to make the smart bets. So, learn fast and act faster. Tech leaders thrive on data. They don't guess; they measure. CEOs should adopt that, too. It means as a CEO, you must look beyond vanity metrics. Go deep and understand your customer behavior, operational problems and market trends using real-time dashboards and predictive analytics. You must be wondering how to adopt this mindset. Well, for this, you don't need to be a marketing guru or tech wizard, but you do need to follow some simple steps. • You should spend time with the CMO and CTO on a weekly basis and ask them what is working, what is not working and what to do next. This way, you will learn faster than any MBA program. • Data is necessary, but that does not mean you should lose narrative. Of course, analytics matter, but your gut does, too. So, combine data-driven decisions with emotional intelligence. It's true leadership. • Keep learning. The world is changing rapidly, so stay informed by reading industry blogs, taking courses, attending tech and marketing conferences and staying up to date. • Do not wait for others to innovate, but be the face of change. Whether you want to launch a new AI initiative or rebrand your company story, your personal commitment matters a lot. When a CEO thinks like a marketer and acts like a tech leader, magic happens. You will get a leader who sees the future like a marketer and builds it like a technologist. You get strategy with soul and innovation that sticks. The future CEO is not just defined by a single skill set; they are storytellers and technologists who help drive the change. It's time to reinvent the CEO playbook. The old CEO playbook includes operational excellence and financial management, which is not enough. So, it's time to reinvent the CEO playbook, which includes customer connection and technology agility. If you're a CEO or aspire to become one, remember this: "Think like a marketer. Act like a tech leader. Lead like a visionary." It is because in the next decade, the CEOs who will adopt this approach will not only survive; they will shape the future. Forbes Technology Council is an invitation-only community for world-class CIOs, CTOs and technology executives. Do I qualify?
Yahoo
9 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Figma Stock Triples in NYSE Debut, Valued at Nearly $68 Billion
Figma's shares more than tripled in their New York Stock Exchange debut Thursday, signaling renewed investor appetite for technology initial public offerings after a multiyear slump. The San Francisco?based design software company priced its IPO at $33 a share, raising $1.2 billion, with most proceeds going to existing shareholders. Shares opened at $85 and were halted after surging past $112 before closing at $115.50, up 250% from the offer price. The closing price valued Figma at about $68 billion. Warning! GuruFocus has detected 6 Warning Signs with F. Figma reported $247 million to $250 million in second?quarter revenue, up about 40% year over year, with operating income between $9 million and $12 million. The company said more than 13 million people use its products monthly, two?thirds of whom are not professional designers. Founded in 2012, Figma's public debut follows the collapse of Adobe's $20 billion acquisition attempt in 2023 after U.K. antitrust regulators opposed the deal. NYSE President Lynn Martin said the strong investor response could open the floodgates for more tech IPOs this year. This article first appeared on GuruFocus. Sign in to access your portfolio


Android Authority
35 minutes ago
- Android Authority
Google Messages will finally tell you when your custom ROM is the problem (APK teardown)
Aamir Siddiqui / Android Authority TL;DR Last year, Google began preventing devices that failed Play Integrity checks from sending RCS messages. Google Messages would simply drop texts, without delivering any errors or warnings. Messages now appears to be adding an explicit notice when security requirements are not met. What's more annoying than when an app stops working? Well — a lot of things, actually — but in this narrow context we're specifically talking about when an app intentionally stops working, but won't clearly communicate why that is. RCS support coming to Google Messages was a major step forward, not just for messaging on Android, but between users across platforms, as well. Last year, we identified an issue with RCS in Google Messages where your texts wouldn't go through, but the app wouldn't tell you why. And now it's looking like Google might finally be ready to do something about that. Authority Insights story on Android Authority. Discover You're reading anstory on Android Authority. Discover Authority Insights for more exclusive reports, app teardowns, leaks, and in-depth tech coverage you won't find anywhere else. An APK teardown helps predict features that may arrive on a service in the future based on work-in-progress code. However, it is possible that such predicted features may not make it to a public release. The problem that we spotted back then affected Google Messages users that had rooted their phones or were using custom ROMs — basically, doing anything that would cause their device to fail Play Integrity API attestation checks. If Messages detected that it was running on device like that, RCS messages would just vanish as you tried to send them — no error, no falling back to regular SMS, nothing. We reached out to Google at the time, and the company described this measure as one undertaken to limit the potential for bad actors abusing RCS, using modified phones to send spam messages and the like. In that light, the way RCS was silently failing at least made a degree of sense — like shadow banning an account, it can be strategic to withhold information from an adversary. But innocent Android enthusiasts just ended up finding themselves caught in that crossfire, and left without a clear indication why. Fast-forward to now, and Messages seems to be getting ready to actually tell those rooted users what its big problem is. Looking through Google's recent release of Messages, we've identified a new text string: Code Copy Text Your device does not meet security requirements This is a string that, once the app starts using it, should display in Messages RCS settings where you're able to toggle on RCS and view its status — the same place we're expecting the app to add that new Details button. Between the two of them, it feels that Google's explicitly trying to improve its communication with users when it comes to RCS issues. Apps like Wallet already just out and tell you when your rooted phone is why it refuses to work, so it's not like this represents a major policy shift for Google — we're just happy to see the side of more information slowly starting to win out. At this point, we can't imagine any serious spammers would gain anything from continued silence, and hopefully when this finally rolls out we'll have fewer custom ROM fans scratching their heads about vanishing messages. Follow