Android 8.0 O Officially Confirmed as Oreo, Available For Eligible Users Starting Today

Android 8.0 Confirmed As Oreo

After months of speculations, Google has finally confirmed that its latest Android operating system version, Android 8.0 (O), will be called Oreo. In a statement released on the company official blog, Google said that Android 8.0 Oreo will starts rolling out in phrases in coming weeks to select eligible devices including Nexus 6P, Nexus 5X, Pixel C, and Nexus Player.

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The firm further disclosed that it has been closely working with top partners, HTC, Sony, Essential, Kyocera, Huawei, Motorola, HMD Global, Sharp and Samsung, over the last several months, who by the end of this year are scheduled to be launching or upgrading new devices to Android 8.0 Oreo.

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Final version are available for Android Beta users for download starting today.

Here are Android 8.0 (O) Oreo major highlights:

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  • Picture-in-Picture: Lets users manage two tasks simultaneously on any size screen, and it’seasy for apps to support it.
  • Notification Dots: Extend the reach of notifications and offer a new way to surface activity in your apps. Dots work with zero effort for most apps– we even extract the color of the dot from your icon.
  • Autofill Framework: Simplifies how users set up a new device and synchronize their passwords. Apps using form data can optimize their apps for Autofill, and password manager apps can use the new APIs to make their services available to users in their favorite apps. Autofill will roll out fully over the next few weeks as part of an update to Google Play Services.
  • System Optimizations: We worked across the system to help apps run faster and smoother — for example, in the runtime we added a new concurrent compacting garbage collection, code locality, and more.
  • Background Limits: We added new limits on background location and wi-fi scans and changes in the way apps run in the background. These boundaries prevent unintentional overuse of battery and memory and apply to all apps — make sure you understand and account for these in your apps.
  • Complementary Android Vitals dashboards and IDE profilers: In the Play Console you can now see aggregate data about your app to help you pinpoint common issues- excessive crash rate, ANR rate, frozen frames, slow rendering, excessive wakeups, and more. You’ll also find new performance profilers in Android Studio 3.0, and new instrumentation in the platform.
  • Autosizing TextView: Use autosizing TextView to automatically fill a TextView with text, regardless of the amount. You can create an array of preset text sizes, or set min and max sizes with a step granularity, and the text will grow and shrink to fill the available TextView space.
  • Fonts in XML: Fonts are now a fully supported resource type. You can now use fonts in XML layouts and define font families in XML.
  • Adaptive Icons: You can now create adaptive icons that the system displays in different shapes, based on a mask selected by a device manufacturer. The system also animates interactions with the icons, and uses them in the launcher, shortcuts, settings, sharing dialogs, and in the overview screen.
  • Downloadable Fonts and Emoji: With downloadable fonts you can load fonts from a shared provider instead of including them in your APK. The provider and support library manage the download of fonts and shares them across apps. The same implementation also supports downloadable emoji, so you can get updated emoji without being limited to the emoji built into the device.
  • Shortcut Pinning: App shortcuts and homescreen widgets are great for engaging users and now you can let users add and pin shortcuts and widgets to the launcher from within your app. There’s also a new option to add a specialized activity to help users create shortcuts. The activity is complete with custom options and confirmation.
  • Wide-Gamut Color for Apps: Imaging apps can now take full advantage of new devices that have a wide-gamut color capable display. To display wide gamut images, apps enable a flag in their manifest files (per activity) and load bitmaps with an embedded wide color profile (AdobeRGB, ProPhoto RGB, DCI-P3, etc.).
  • WebView Enhancements: In Android Oreo, we’ve enabled WebView multiprocess mode by default and added an API to let your app handle errors and crashes. You can also opt in your app’s WebView objects to verify URLs through Google Safe Browsing.
  • Java 8 Language APIs and Runtime Optimizations: Android now supports several new Java Language APIs, including the new java.time API. In addition, the Android Runtime is faster than ever before, with improvements of up to 2x on some application benchmarks.

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