Android 17 updates includes foldable gaming mode and bubble multitasking

Android 17 updates includes foldable gaming mode and bubble multitasking


Google has officially began rolling out Android 17, with its proprietary Pixel ecosystem securing first-in-line access before the mobile OS migrates to the broader Android landscape later this year. Coinciding with the software debut, Google announced that Gemini Intelligence, the company’s highly anticipated, context-aware AI architecture built to execute complex, multi-step workflows, will land on select premium devices later this summer.

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Android 17 introduces a suite of design overhauls, creative utilities, and robust security defences designed to maximize the potential of modern smartphones.

The headline user interface upgrade is the expansion of Bubbles, a feature that transforms any standard app into a floating, interactive window.

  • Seamless Floating Windows: By long-pressing an app icon, users can instantly convert it into a floating bubble, allowing them to cross-reference and view data from multiple applications simultaneously.
  • The Large-Screen ‘Bubble Bar’: For foldables like the Samsung Galaxy Fold and the Google Pixel 10 Pro Fold, Android 17 introduces a dedicated “bubble bar” at the base of the display. This taskbar acts as a dock where users can swap between active app bubbles with a single tap, resize windows, or maximize them back to full-screen mode instantly.

Google has overhauled its native screen recording module with Screen Reactions. This tool uses the phone’s front-facing selfie camera to superimpose a live video of the user over a real-time recording of their screen.

Tailor-made for generating content for TikTok, Instagram, and Facebook, Screen Reactions allows creators to seamlessly record authentic reactions to websites, apps, and video clips without the friction of switching third-party apps or utilizing external editing software.

To ensure no screen real estate is squandered on large-format foldables, Android 17 debuts an optimized Foldable Gaming Mode.

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When activated, the system splits the unfolded screen into a balanced 50/50 orientation, projecting the gameplay video on the top half while populating a virtual gamepad across the bottom half. For enthusiasts who prefer physical hardware, the mode offers native controller remapping. Under the hood, Google has implemented more efficient memory-purging protocols for high-definition gaming, dramatically reducing frame drops and micro-stuttering.

Android 17 heavily reinforces user privacy while introducing aggressive physical security measures to deter theft:

  • Granular Permissions: Users can now grant applications temporary, one-time access to device telemetry like location, and can choose to share isolated, specific contacts rather than exposing their entire address book.
  • Find Hub ‘Mark as Lost’: The Find My Device network has been rebranded as Find Hub, bringing a powerful new “Mark as Lost” workflow. If a handset goes missing, the owner can remotely lock the terminal requiring biometric authentication—preventing a thief from accessing the device even if they have compromised the physical passcode.
  • Proactive System Shields: Google has bolstered its Live Threat Detection subsystem to intercept and block sophisticated malware. Additionally, the OS cracks down on brute-force attempts by strictly limiting PIN guesses and introducing significantly longer lockout penalties between failed attempts.