This is one of the rare instances when I'm glad I have Samsung with their custom UI. I have to sometimes use a Pixel phone, and those new Android 12 settings tiles overall are just mind-boggling. It feels like a change just for the sake of change, ordered by marketing department or something.
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Same here. I read the post and got so confused because I have my quick bar set up with WiFi as the first toggle option.
Alright, a few things:
- Removing a direct QS tile for Wifi and Mobile Data was a dumb idea from Google's part, and there is no defense for that. I'm on LineageOS and I have the option to add those two back, but I think this isn't something that came from AOSP.
- The Internet QS Tile is actually a pretty good idea for the average user. Most of the time when you want to disable Mobile Data you want to enable WiFi, and vice versa. This adds one more step, but removes one QS Tile and condense Internet options into a single thing. I'm fairly sure this wouldn't be a slight controversial decision if not for the removal of the direct QS Tiles.
This is the second post this week that mentions the iOS control center and I'm confused by it. On Android, the bottom area uses a upward gesture to go home and/or Recents, that's why the Quick Settings and Notification are on the top.
How does the user go to the homescreen on iOS since the bottom area opens the control center?
Since iPhone X, all iPhones with no home button has the Control Center on the top right side and notification on the top left side.
So it isn't on the bottom? Why the hell some posts mentions the control center being on the bottom?
In my case it's because I used an iPhone SE until a couple of weeks ago. It's still a thing on their older phones and I think it makes more sense than the newer implementation. Notifications on top and toggles on bottom is the most sensible way to do it.
Issue with that is that you need to stretch your finger to the top to show the screen in the first place. If you had to readjust your grip to reach the top, then you are likely already "in range" to reach the QS Tiles on top.
If they moved the Quick Settings to the bottom, then you'd need to readjust your grip after triggering the Notifications/Quick Settings shade.
It only makes sense to move the Tiles to the bottom if you also redesign how you trigger the shade
Ah, cool to hear they went the sensible way.
But why would you need to disable mobile data when you enable WiFi? WiFi is automatically preferred, so having the mobile data toggle on or off doesn't matter while connected to WiFi.
Spotty internet on both sides of the equation. It is common enough to happen.
If your WiFi is weird at the moment due to ISP side maintenance, or if you are on the edge of the signal, you might want to disable wifi and enable mobile data.
On the other hand, you could simply not have enough data left in your plan, so you want to keep your phone from using Mobile Data, even if you might get out of range from your router.
It's the kind of thing they should allow us to enable in dev tools, if they want to hide it from the average user.
How often are you toggling your internet connection? This seems like a major overreaction to such a minor inconvenience.
Unfortunately I have to switch between data and two different wifi networks. The key point here is that quick settings in general should be easier to reach, since modern phones have bigger displays.
I do it twice each day. Turn on in morning, turn off at night.