
This small quick settings tweak is low-key my most anticipated Android 16 improvement
Android 16 is shaping up to be the biggest visual update to Google's mobile operating system since the introduction of Material You with Android 12. That release was all about making the experience feel more personal to each user, with dynamic theming that could extract your wallpaper colors and apply them to other parts of the system. There was also a much more playful approach to form and motion across the OS. With its latest design system update, Material 3 Expressive, Google is taking that philosophy one step further, with even bolder colors and shapes, springier animations, and some quirky new typography choices.
While many of the upcoming changes in Android 16 feel somewhat superficial, with little practical significance, there are some small tweaks that I think will make a big difference to the way I interact with my Pixel phone. Chief among them is a seemingly minor update to the quick settings panel that sits atop the notification shade. And it's something I've been yearning for ever since the launch of Android 12 back in 2021.
What's your most anticipated Android 16 feature?
0 votes
Live Updates
NaN %
Upgraded quick settings
NaN %
Magic Portrait wallpapers
NaN %
New visuals and animations
NaN %
Expanded Find Hub app
NaN %
Fixing what Android 12 broke
As far as I'm concerned, Google perfected the quick settings panel as far back as Android 7.1. Easily accessible toggles debuted with Nougat (7.0), where a single swipe down from the top would reveal five quick settings icons in a single row, with the sixth spot being reserved for a down arrow that revealed expanded settings with more information. Google moved the arrow and replaced it with another toggle in the next point release (7.1). We now had six customizable toggles in a single line, leaving plenty of space below for our all-important notifications. Swipe down again and you'd see nine expanded toggles with information about WiFi networks, connected devices, and so on.
Aside from tweaks to the styling, this remained almost unchanged for the next four Android versions (see Android 9 Pie in the image above). Android 11 irked some users when it reduced the number of expanded quick settings from nine to six (to make room for new media controls). But Android 12 is when the biggest change to this feature arrived, and it's hard not to see it as a major misstep from Google.
Instead of the 6 quick settings toggles in the notification shade that we'd all gotten used to, we were now greeted by just four extra-wide tiles with text labels. They also took up more vertical space since they were spread across two lines. It seems that Google wanted to make some information more glanceable, such as which Bluetooth device you were connected to. But this wasn't consistently applied, so you'd have tiles such as 'Internet' that only showed your connected network when the quick settings panel was expanded. Other toggles, such as 'Flashlight' and 'Hotspot', were given unnecessary labels even though their utility was obvious from the icon. The on/off status was still conveyed by the color of the tile, as it had been previously.
Robert Triggs / Android Authority
Like many others, I found this change to be incredibly frustrating. Having access to fewer toggles with a single swipe down was already less convenient, but Google also made changes to how some of these toggles functioned. You could no longer turn WiFi on or off with a single tap — instead, you'd have to open the now combined 'Internet' menu and tap again to enable or disable your connection.
Android 12's large tiles was a misstep Android 16 will fix.
This is how Android's quick settings have worked for the last four years, at least on a Google Pixel device. Mercifully, Android 16 is set to bring back smaller toggles and give us much more control over the layout of our quick settings. As shown by our own Mishaal Rahman in the video below (an earlier version), it's going to be possible to edit the size of each quick settings tile. If you don't mind the larger 1×2 tiles, you can leave them as they are. Those of us who want smaller 1×1 toggles can shrink them accordingly, on a per-toggle basis.
The quick settings panel at the top of the notification shade will still take up two rows, which means we'll be able to have up to eight toggles within easy reach if we make them all 1×1. The best part of this is the ability to mix and match. I can see myself keeping the wide Bluetooth tile so I can easily glance at my connected devices while making most of the other toggles smaller. The 'Flashlight' tile no longer needs to so brazenly announce its presence every time I pull down my quick settings, as if it were begging to be switched on. It can go back to subtly waiting in the wings for that once-in-a-blue-moon occasion when I quickly need to access it.
Adding to my delight, Google is also arranging quick settings tiles in neatly organized categories in the editor view. This will make it easier and faster to find the ones you want to use — yet another user-friendly tweak that I can get behind. All in all, I think these quick settings improvements represent some of the most utilitarian quality-of-life changes I've seen in an Android update for quite some time. It's especially welcome since many of the Material 3 Expressive upgrades seem to be focused more on form than function.
Quick settings improvements are the most utilitarian quality-of-life changes for some time.
The Android platform has always been praised for its personality and customizability, but Google's Pixel software experience tends to be more rigid than what's offered by Samsung and other OEMs. Apple has also closed the gap when it comes to personalization in recent years, with the introduction of tinted app icons, lock screen customization, and a more editable Control Center.
So what would otherwise be a fairly minor quick settings tweak represents a big win for the tinkerers out there. With exciting additions such as Live Updates, new motion physics, and bolder UI elements, Android 16 could be Google's most user-friendly OS yet. And thanks to innovative new wallpaper settings, an intriguing new Pixel themes feature, and the aforementioned quick settings changes, our Pixels are also going to be more customizable than ever before.
Hashtags

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


The Verge
an hour ago
- The Verge
Samsung is about to find out if Ultra is enough
I don't often get asked about the phones I'm testing when I'm out and about, unless it's a folding phone. Then I usually hear some version of the same thing: 'Oh, I thought about getting one of those! But then I just got a [insert slab-style phone name here].' My anecdotal data matches the actual sales figures; there are many more people curious about folding phones than there are buyers of folding phones. Samsung would very much like that to not be the case, and, by all indications, it's about to pull out all the stops at at its Unpacked event on July 9th. But is putting the Ultra name on a folding phone enough? The weak sales are not for lack of trying — Samsung has been trying to sell us on foldables for a good chunk of the last decade, and Google also got in the game a couple of years ago. Motorola has had substantial success selling clamshell-style flip phones; Counterpoint Research found that the brand's foldable market share grew 253 percent year-over-year in 2024. But that's a bigger piece of a very small pie. TrendForce estimated that foldables made up just 1.5 percent of the overall smartphone market in 2024. In the US, Samsung was the earliest and loudest folding phone maker, but a half dozen iterations of folding phones hasn't managed to make a significant dent. It didn't help that Samsung's foldable lineup last year was a barely warmed-over version of the one from a year before. The Z Flip 6 was a spec bump with some software improvements; the Fold 6 trimmed a few millimeters here, added a few there, and laid flatter when you opened it — not exactly gripping stuff. Lucky for us, Samsung seems to have more excitement planned this time around. The company has all but confirmed that we'll get an Ultra-branded Fold for the first time, with a thinner profile to rival the recent efforts from Honor and Oppo. The Z Flip 7 is likely to get a bigger, Razr-style screen that covers most of the front panel, and we might see a cheaper FE version with the old cover screen design. That all seems to address a couple of common complaints about foldables: they're too pricey and come with too many tradeoffs compared to a slab-style phone. I'm not quite sure it'll be enough, though. Foldables remain more susceptible to damage from dust than a standard flagship phone — and repairs can be pricier. Despite saying years ago that it's pursuing full dustproofing, Samsung doesn't seem to have cracked the code on a fully IP68-rated foldable just yet. Taking a chance on an expensive phone that's less durable than your typical $1,000 flagship? That's kind of a big ask, especially with prices on everything else we buy going up, too. It's not all doom and gloom for foldables, however. Analysts are putting a lot of stock in rumors of a folding phone from Apple coming in 2026. An iFold or whatever it might be called could help expand the market, at least in the US, and maybe that rising tide would float Samsung's boat, too. Maybe a couple of new models hitting different price segments is enough to get Samsung's marketshare growing again — a strategy that has worked well for the company in the past. Maybe an Ultra foldable with ultra specs will convince some people who were on the fence about folding phones. And if anyone was holding out for an extra hinge, well, Samsung might just have that covered, too. Photography by Allison Johnson / The Verge


Android Authority
2 hours ago
- Android Authority
Why government red tape is draining your phone's battery potential
Robert Triggs / Android Authority You're not alone if you're pining for longer battery life from your latest smartphone. Despite emerging technologies like silicon-carbon cells, we've seemingly hit a ceiling just above the 5,000 mAh mark — at least for phones sold in the US and Europe. Meanwhile, glance over at models in China or India, and you'll spot far larger batteries in otherwise identical handsets. For example, the new Nothing Phone 3 packs a 5,150mAh battery globally, but bumps that up to 5,500mAh in India. The HONOR Magic 7 Pro goes from 5,270mAh in Europe to 5,850mAh in China, and the Xiaomi 15 Ultra stretches from 5,410mAh globally to a massive 6,000mAh in its domestic market. So what gives? Why can't we have these same huge battery capacities on the other side of the world too? Wouldn't you know it? Regulation and red tape are to blame Rita El Khoury / Android Authority If you've ever attempted to ship a phone by post in Europe or the US (and probably many other countries too), you might have been interrogated by the postmaster about the size of the battery and whether it's sealed in the device. That's because many countries treat lithium-ion batteries as hazardous goods, with strict rules on how they're packaged and transported. The same rules apply — often even more stringently — to commercial shipments moving by air, road, rail, or sea. Several major international regulations govern this. In Europe, there's the ADR (covering road transport), RID (rail), and IMDG (sea). For air shipments, carriers follow the International Air Transport Association's (IATA) Dangerous Goods Regulations (DGR) and the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) rules. In the US, there's also the Code of Federal Regulations, 49 CFR § 173.185, which lays out similar requirements, and other nations sometimes have their own rule variations. All of these regulations ultimately trace back to the UN's Model Regulations, which define lithium-ion batteries as either UN3480 (batteries shipped on their own) or UN3481 (batteries packed with or inside equipment). But the most important piece is UN Special Provision 188, which sets a threshold for what's considered a 'small' lithium-ion battery that can be shipped under simplified rules. That limit is 20Wh (watt-hours) per cell, and it's mirrored in the ADR, IMDG, IATA, and other international rules that govern global transportation networks. For context, there's also a 100Wh limit for a complete battery pack before stricter transport classifications kick in — but that's more relevant for laptops and power banks. International transport rules cap single-cell li-ion capacity at 20Wh, roughly 5,300mAh. A 20Wh cap might sound large, but it's tied to the battery's voltage. For a typical lithium-ion cell with a nominal voltage around 3.8 V, this works out to roughly 5,300mAh per cell — which is about where most modern smartphone batteries in Europe and the US max out. That's why you might notice slightly smaller battery capacities in these markets compared to some models sold in countries with fewer shipping constraints. While these rules might be annoying from a consumer product perspective, they exist for a very good reason. Lithium-ion batteries pack a lot of energy into a small space, which is what makes them so good for powering phones and laptops, but it also means they can pose a fire risk if damaged, short-circuited, or exposed to heat. We've all seen the exploding phone horror stories due to thermal runaway. Shipping regulations are designed to minimize these risks by limiting the size of batteries that can travel under simpler, less costly rules, alongside the UN38.3 altitude, vibration, and thermal tests that all lithium batteries must pass to prove they can be transported safely. By capping battery energy at 20Wh per cell for simplified transport, authorities reduce the chances of large-scale fires in trucks, ships, or aircraft cargo holds, which helps keep insurance costs down as well. Bigger batteries aren't banned outright, but they require more protective packaging, special documentation, and sometimes dedicated cargo handling to keep people and property safe. Why do some phones still have 6,000mAh batteries? Joe Maring / Android Authority Did you spot the lawyer's way out of this conundrum? The 20Wh rule applies to single battery cells, but you can skirt this restriction if you pack two (or more) batteries together inside a gadget. Some smartphones have sported split-cell designs for more efficient fast charging for a number of years now, most noticeably from BBK brands OnePlus and OPPO. Hence, you'll still find a colossal 6,000mAh battery stateside with the OnePlus 13, and the OPPO Find X8 Pro makes its way to Europe with its 5,910mAh cell intact. But that's not exactly a cheap solution; not only does it require multiple cells, but special circuitry to handle charging and discharging safely. Not every brand is willing to invest in that, which is one reason why Apple, Google, Samsung, and many others haven't pushed ahead with quite as large capacities as some of their Chinese competitors. Still, laptops have long used multiple smaller cells wired together to stay safely under the 100Wh pack limit, which is why we rarely see them run into shipping issues. Our smartphones will have to follow suit if we want to take another leap up in capacity. More expensive split-cell designs are one way to boost phone battery life to new highs. When it comes to phones manufactured and sold in China, the products move entirely internally, so many of the rules that govern international shipping don't apply or aren't enforced as strictly. Likewise, land transportation between China and its neighbours, along with localized manufacturing, helps explain why we occasionally see some larger capacity models make their way outside of China as well. If you really want bigger batteries in your gadgets, we will either have to pay the premium for split cell designs, fork out for the cost, liability, and insurance premiums for shipping bigger batteries, or start manufacturing them locally. That latter point obviously isn't going to happen, so we might be snookered, which will unfortunately reduce the scale of the battery-life breakthroughs being made by technologies like silicon-carbon batteries.


CNET
3 hours ago
- CNET
Get a Free Storage Upgrade When Your Preorder the Sleek and Unique Nothing Phone 3
Samsung and Google may make some of the most popular Android phones, but there not the only worthwhile options out there. CNET's tech experts have been continually impressed with Nothing's sleek and stylish devices, and a new model is on the way. The Nothing Phone 3 is set to hit shelves on July 15, and Amazon is offering a great preorder deal throughout the Fourth of July weekend. The online retailer is offering $100 off the more advanced configuration with 16GB of RAM and 512GB of storage, which knocks it down to $799. That's the same price as the basic model, which means you're essentially getting a free storage upgrade. There's no set expiration for this offer, but with the phone releasing soon and the Fourth of July weekend ending, we'd get your preorder in sooner rather than later. Our reviewer found a lot to like about this 2025 Android, including its eye-catching design and unique light-up interface. And the positives don't stop there. It's equipped with a powerful Snapdragon 8S Gen 4 processor and 16GB of RAM to support a full suite of AI tools and features. Plus, it has a vibrant 6.7-inch 1.5K AMOLED display, and a 50MP quad camera system to capture stunning photos and 4K videos. It's powered by the lates Android 15 OS, and lightning-fast 65W charging that can get the battery to 50% in less than 20 minutes. Best July Prime Day Deals 2025 CNET's team of shopping experts have explored thousands of deals on everything from TVs and outdoor furniture to phone accessories and everyday essentials so you can shop the best Prime Day deals in one place. See Now Why this deal matters This Nothing phone is a great option for those who want an alternative from the major brands. It features some cutting-edge hardware and a quirky, eye-catching design that helps it stand out from the crowd. If you've been looking to upgrade, this Fourth of July weekend preorder offer is a great chance to grab one at a solid price.