Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
View attachment 144303
Settings > System > Gestures > System navigation.
Choose what you prefer.
If you set a third party launcher as default it won't let you choose the new gestures (because rather than map the new gestures onto the old functions they've managed to link the home gesture to their launcher - Google employ a lot of smart people, but they clearly kept them away from the UI team...).
Just for clarity, was your device running 9 and then upgraded to 10, or was 10 the original OS on the device?Is there any way to go back to Android 9?
Android 10 was released yesterday for the Pixel devices since they're first in line, so I believe he updated to it.Just for clarity, was your device running 9 and then upgraded to 10, or was 10 the original OS on the device?
I didn't see where the OP said he had a Pixel; I saw @Hadron's reference to it, but didn't know how he knew that.Android 10 was released yesterday for the Pixel devices since they're first in line, so I believe he updated to it.
Android 10 was released yesterday for Pixel devices so there wouldn't be devices on the market with it pre-installed just yet.I didn't see where the OP said he had a Pixel; I saw @Hadron's reference to it, but didn't know how he knew that.
The factory reset would just reset the data, not the android version.Okay, and someone feel free to correct me, but why can't he just do a factory reset? Then quickly disable auto-update? As I see it, that puts the device back to its original state, including its Android version, right?
I've been reading about people using 10 for awhile, having upgraded to it, so I guess I jumped to the conclusion that by now there must be brand-new devices with it installed.Android 10 was released yesterday for Pixel devices so there wouldn't be devices on the market with it pre-installed just yet.
So it's not a true factory reset.The factory reset would just reset the data, not the android version.
Yes, you've been able to use android 10 for a while now if you participated in the Beta program. As for the official release, that was yesterday.I've been reading about people using 10 for awhile, having upgraded to it, so I guess I jumped to the conclusion that by now there must be brand-new devices with it installed.
It's just a factory reset for the android version you are on. You're just clearing it of data and settings. It's always been this way.So it's not a true factory reset.
A true factory reset would restore it to its original, shipped-from-the-factory condition. You'd be able to look at its specs page on its manufacturer's site, compare that to your 'factory reset'-ed device and see identical specs.It's just a factory reset for the android version you are on. You're just clearing it of data and settings. It's always been this way.
Honestly it's not a big deal. It's also not ideal to upgrade to a new version and decide later on to factory reset for whatever reason and get thrown back to an old version (I'd be pissed if that were to happen). You're factory resetting android OS as oppose to the device which for most folks is more convenient.A true factory reset would restore it to its original, shipped-from-the-factory condition. You'd be able to look at its specs page on its manufacturer's site, compare that to your 'factory reset'-ed device and see identical specs.
On Google's support page, the relevant article is called "Reset your Android device to factory settings." 'Factory settings' to me means exactly what its name says!
Does anyone know why they use incorrect and misleading terminology for this?
This is why some of us refer to it as a factory data reset sometimes - because the term "factory reset" may imply more than it really is. A few years ago I'd point out that to reset the operating system (and system firmware) would require that the phone kept a complete set of images in the storage somewhere, and that few people who complained that their "16GB" phone only gave them 10GB would really want that reduced to 6GB just so that if they ever did a reset they'd then spend the rest of the day in a series of system updates.On Google's support page, the relevant article is called "Reset your Android device to factory settings." 'Factory settings' to me means exactly what its name says!
Does anyone know why they use incorrect and misleading terminology for this?
This is interesting to me because it suggests that not only does your 3a behave differently from my 2 now, but it did with Android 9 too.Yes, I have a Pixel 3a. It came with Android 9.
It used to be that with 2 button navigation that I could drag the Home button right and the running apps would show and let me continue to drag left/right to select through all apps. Toggling to the previous app was a simple short swipe right in the Home button. If I swiped up in the area to the right of the Home button it would show that list of apps and they would remain and I could swipe left/right to choose or swipe up the close the app. I liked that interface. It worked well.
In Android 10, for 2 button it says "To switch apps swipe up on the Home button. To see all apps swipe up again." Not quite accurate. When I set that, swiping up on the Home button is the same as swiping up on the right area as in 9. It simply puts you into that all apps shown mode and you then have to swipe left/right to find the app. It no long has that convenient ability to scroll through all the apps with the drag right on the Home button. If you drag up and then left/right, and then drag back down to select, you can barely get to one adjacent app, but not able to see all of them. Dragging right on the Home button does absolutely nothing now.
Why would they put in a nice method like that and then just throw it away, and not even give the option to keep it if you want?? They could have just left that drag-right functionality in there, since it hasn't been replaced. They seem committed to just making things worse.
That's also typical Google. The Pixel 2 has the "active edge" feature, but Google won't let you assign that to anything other than Assistant. They want you to use Assistant (maximises their data collection), and this is about what suits them, not you.Newly added is a long press on Home brings up Google Assistant. I have no interest in that and with some digging was able to disable it, though it still shows the polka dots and long-press can't be assigned to something useful.