JR Raphael
Contributing Editor

14 advanced Android 16 tips

how-to
Oct 16, 202515 mins

Whether you've just gotten Android 16 or you've had it in front of you for months, you're bound to find something new and useful in this collection of off-the-beaten-path pointers.

Google Android 16
Credit: Google, modified by Foundry

Well, this is highly irregular.

For the first time in many moons now, Googleโ€™s giving us not one but two new full-fledged Android versions in a single year. Android 16 officially arrived into the world this summer, and itโ€™ll soon be followed by another release this fall.

Keeping up with whatโ€™s new and noteworthy isnโ€™t easy at a pace like this โ€” and thatโ€™s to say nothing about the ever-streaming updates to core system apps like Gemini, the Google Phone app, and other Android-associated elements.

It may be mildly dizzying at times, but it sure is exciting โ€” and an awesome indication that things are endlessly evolving in this arena, with something fresh โ€˜nโ€™ shiny always on its way to your device or at least off on the horizon.

Here, specifically, are 14 such shimmering treasures to surface as soon as you see Android 16 show up on your phone โ€” or to look for now, even if the softwareโ€™s already been there and waiting for a while.

Note that these features are presented as they apply to Google-made Pixel phones and Samsung-made Galaxy devices, specifically. Different device-makers modify Android in different ways, so if youโ€™re using a phone made by any other company, the availability and exact presentation of some items may vary โ€” as may the timing around when exactly your device-maker decides to send any given Android version to you in the first place!

Android 16 tips, part I: Productivity

1. Maybe the most outwardly significant change in Android 16 โ€” and simultaneously one of the toughest tweaks to notice โ€” is the softwareโ€™s subtly enhanced interface for the expandable Quick Settings panel of on-demand shortcuts.

Quick Settings, if the name doesnโ€™t ring a bell, is the menu of tappable tiles that shows up when you swipe down from the top of your screen (swiping specifically from the right side of the display, somewhat confusingly, on recent Samsung devices). And as of Android 16, you can resize any of the shortcuts within that area to fit even more tiles within a single view.

See?

animated screenshot showing resizing quick settings in android 16

Edit, tap, slide โ€” three steps to a Quick Settings tile resize.

JR Raphael / Foundry

The tricky thing is that it isnโ€™t at all obvious this is possible. You have to edit your Quick Settings and then slide your finger along a tile to even realize such a feat is now achievable.

Also, this one is showing up so far only on Googleโ€™s own Pixel devices. Samsung, which heavily modifies the standard Android Quick Settings interface in the software it sends out to its Galaxy gadgets, has suggested that the feature will reach its devices sometime next year.

As for other Android device-makers beyond that, weโ€™ll have to wait and see โ€” since no one else has rolled out any Android 16 updates yet (sighโ€ฆ) โ€” but in scenarios where software closely follows Googleโ€™s core Android interface, it certainly seems like the setup should be present.

2. Another easy-to-miss update in Android 16 is a whole new approach around how you tell your phone to hush.

Androidโ€™s Do Not Disturb system is now supplemented by a broader, more powerful, and more customizable feature called Modes โ€” essentially a series of states you can create to control exactly how your device does or doesnโ€™t interrupt you at different times. That means you can have multiple do-not-disturb presets for different sorts of scenarios.

So you might, for instance, have one mode for work that allows only notifications from work-related apps and messages from your family and then have another mode for the weekend that blocks all but the most urgent work-related alerts from making their way through.

Itโ€™s a lot to wrap your head around initially โ€” and, not surprisingly, the specifics of how it works vary from the standard Google Android setup to Samsungโ€™s different-for-the-sake-of-being-different implementation โ€” but the good news is that once youโ€™ve set things up the way you want โ€™em once, itโ€™s quite literally just a matter of making a couple quick taps anytime you want to shift your phone from one mode to another from that point forward.

Iโ€™ve got a comprehensive guide to Android 16 Modes, with ample examples, to help you get going.

(Modes technically made its debut in Android 15, by the by, but only in a more rudimentary and limited fashion. Android 16 is where the feature really comes into its own.)

3. Speaking of easier adjustments, the Galaxy-aimed version of Android 16 includes an intriguing new series of preset Routines โ€” Samsungโ€™s term for snippets of simple automation that can save you time and make your phone even more primed for productivity.

Theyโ€™re basically just โ€œif this, then thatโ€-style rules, with all manners of available triggers and actions. Maybe, for example, youโ€™d want your phoneโ€™s ring volume to turn all the way up and your default ringtone to change to a generic ringing sound โ€” instead of the wildly embarrassing โ€œMMMBopโ€ ringtone you usually use โ€” whenever youโ€™re at the office. Or maybe youโ€™d like to automatically activate your aforementioned weekend mode anytime youโ€™ve got a calendar event active with the word โ€œvacationโ€ in it. The possibilities are plentiful, and all youโ€™ve gotta do is think about what might be useful for you.

modes and routines screen on samsung galaxy phone

Samsung has some interesting new automation-related options in its Android 16 Modes and Routines section.

JR Raphael / Foundry

Look in the Modes and Routines section of a Samsung deviceโ€™s system settings and tap the Routines tab at the bottom of that area to explore all your newly available options.

4. Reminders should just be simple โ€” arguably even effortless โ€” but all too often, they arenโ€™t. For one all-too-perfect example, Google added an incredible on-demand screenshot-connected reminders system into its Pixel phones starting with the Pixel 9, and you can now emulate something similar on any Android device via Gemini, but those systems have one glaring limitation: They canโ€™t create a reminder based on your physical location.

And things only get even more murky from there. Android used to be able to handle location-based reminders in a couple different places, but then Google did its infamous flippity-floppity dance and took that power away for no apparent reason. I found a fantastic independently developed open-source app that handily fills the void, but if youโ€™ve got a Galaxy gizmo and donโ€™t mind limiting yourself to Samsungโ€™s ecosystem, youโ€™ve now got an even easier-to-access option.

As of Android 16, Samsung is including a Reminder app on its devices that acts as a hub for any and all reminders you want to create on your phone. Notably, it offers the ability to associate a reminder with a specific physical spot and then have it appear whenever you arrive at or even leave said location.

reminders screen on samsung galaxy phone showing location based reminder

Samsungโ€™s new native Reminder app includes the option to set location-based reminders.

JR Raphael / Foundry

The downside is that the data is limited to being accessed only on Samsung Galaxy phones โ€” meaning you canโ€™t get to it on a computer or a non-Samsung phone or tablet, for one, and if you ever move to a different type of Android device in the future, you wonโ€™t be able to continue using the service. (It does have an option to sync with Microsoft To-Do, but since that app doesnโ€™t offer location-based reminders, everything wouldnโ€™t carry over โ€” and also, such syncing can only occur when youโ€™ve actively got the app open on a Samsung phone.)

All of that being said, itโ€™s an interesting new option to have built into your phone for the moment, at least. If you want to try it, look for the new Reminder icon in your Android-16-running Galaxy deviceโ€™s app drawer โ€” and if you donโ€™t see it, try tapping the search box inside the app drawer and searching for reminder. I had to do that once to get it to show up.

5. Ever find yourself struggling to hear or follow along while someoneโ€™s yappinโ€™ your ear off during a Very Important Business-Related phone call? Samsungโ€™s Android 16 setup sports a new feature that can help.

Itโ€™s technically redundant with an existing Android platform-level feature, but it might be a teensy bit more convenient to keep active for phone calls, specifically, without affecting any other part of your Android experience.

The feature is called Call Captions, and it does exactly what youโ€™d expect: It puts visible text on your screen showing what each person is saying whenever a call is active (much like the Android Live Caption system, though that feature isnโ€™t specific only to calls).

You can enable it by tapping the three-dot menu icon within the Samsung Phone app, if youโ€™re so inclined, then selecting โ€œSettingsโ€ followed by โ€œCall Captions.โ€

6. Also new in the Samsung sphere is an option to group alarms in the Samsung-provided Clock app (which is not the same as the available-on-any-device Google Android Clock app) so you can turn โ€™em all on or off together with a single tap. This might be handy if, for instance, you travel frequently for work and have a certain series of alarms you use when youโ€™re out on the road.

Open up the Samsung Clock app and tap the three-dot menu icon within the Alarm tab to find the โ€œAlarm groupsโ€ option and see how it might work for you.

Android 16 tips, part II: Security

7. Androidโ€™s quietly been beefing up its security in ways that donโ€™t tend to command a lot of headlines but are arguably among the platformโ€™s most important progressions โ€” particularly for professionals. And Android 16 is no exception: Perhaps most notably, the software introduces a new single-switch Advanced Protection option that essentially enables all the most important and advisable Android security settings for you in one fell swoop.

You can read more about what exactly is involved in my Android 16 Advanced Protection primer, and you can find the switch for yourself by searching your system settings for Advanced Protection.

8. Another Android-16-added element worth activating on any work-connected device is a feature called Identity Check. Identity Check ties into the long-standing Google Extend Unlock (a.k.a. Smart Lock) system and uses its โ€œTrusted Placesโ€ data to determine which physical locations are relatively low risk for you โ€” like your home, for instance, and maybe also your office.

It then requires extra biometric authentication around various โ€œsensitiveโ€ actions anytime youโ€™re outside of those places โ€” so, for instance, youโ€™d have to authenticate with a face unlock or fingerprint before changing your deviceโ€™s PIN, pattern, or password or before disabling device tracking within the Google Find Hub (a.k.a. Find My Device) system if you arenโ€™t in a trusted area.

Itโ€™s a smart added bit of protection with virtually no real downside. Be sure to search your system settings for Identity Check to find and enable it on any devices youโ€™re using.

Android 16 tips, part III: General usability

9. Hereโ€™s a handy little addition you might need only on rare occasion but will be very happy to see when any such instance arises: As of Android 16, itโ€™s now possible to restore data from a different device even after your initial setup.

Make a mental note for the future โ€” and if youโ€™re using a Samsung phone, take note, too, that Samsung opts to use its own proprietary system for this instead of relying on the standard Android setup, but it does offer a similar sort of option within its Samsung Switch app (albeit one that seems to be a little more inconsistent in effectiveness, if user reports are any indication).

10. Got a Pixel? You can now set a bunch of non-language-specific regional preferences independent of your preferred language โ€” in a shockingly sensible-seeming twist.

Head into the System section of your system settings and tap โ€œLanguagesโ€ to find the full list of choices.

languages screen in android 16 settings including regional preferences

Youโ€™ll find a lot more than just language-specific settings within the Android 16 Languages section.

JR Raphael / Foundry

11. If you ever find yourself squinting to see certain text on your screen, youโ€™ve got a handy new option as of Android 16: Inside the Accessibility section of your system settings, under โ€œDisplay size and text,โ€ youโ€™ll find a switch thatโ€™ll outline all text and essentially highlight it (with either a black or white background, depending on the context) to make it easier to read.

display size and text screen on pixel phone with outline text option

At the bottom of the screen is Android 16โ€™s new text outlining option โ€” off (left) and active (right).

JR Raphael / Foundry

Samsung for some reason calls its equivalent โ€œRelumino outline,โ€ and itโ€™s honestly a lot less effective in the way itโ€™s implemented โ€” but itโ€™s there, if you want to try it, within the โ€œVision enhancementsโ€ area of the Accessibility settings on a current Galaxy gadget.

12. Hereโ€™s an interesting addition you almost certainly didnโ€™t notice: Androidโ€™s split-screen system has gained an extra pinch of flexibility as of the Android 16 update.

Once youโ€™ve initiated a screen split between any two apps, you can now slide the divider between โ€™em into a 90:10 divide โ€” a ratio that wasnโ€™t previously available and that opens the door to leaving yourself just a sliver of a view in one app while allowing the other to dominate your display.

Who knew?!

13. For the hearing-aid wearers among us, Android 16 on the Pixel front adds a new Quick Settings tile packed with an expanded and more easily accessible series of hearing aid options and controls.

Youโ€™ll likely have to find and add the tile into your active Quick Settings area before itโ€™ll be visible โ€” by using the pencil-shaped editing icon in that panel, then scrolling down until you find โ€œHearing Devicesโ€ and tapping it to turn it on.

Once you do, youโ€™ll be able to tap that tile to reveal options for toggling between your hearing aid mic and your phone mic for phone calls โ€” a new Android-16-added touch โ€” along with the ability to adjust your hearing aid volume right from your phone.

14. You can keep better tabs on your battery health with Android 16โ€™s new battery-monitoring features. On Pixels, youโ€™ll find the in-depth dashboard in the Battery section of your system settings, under โ€œBattery healthโ€; with Samsung, the equivalent info (including a newly customizable โ€œBattery Protectionโ€ option) is directly within the main Battery settings area.

reminders screen on samsung galaxy phone showing location based reminder

Samsungโ€™s new native Reminder app includes the option to set location-based reminders.

JR Raphael / Foundry

Hungry for more Android 16 goodness? Discover 7 Android 16 additions that are quietly working for you and 6 easily overlooked ways Android 16 can make your life easier.

And remember: Here in the land oโ€™ Android, the hunt for new treasures is never truly over. Weโ€™ll have the next big Android version in front of us to inspect and explore before long and plenty of other ร  la carte additions popping up all over in the meantime.

Be sure to read my Android Intelligence column at Computerworld and follow my Android Intelligence newsletter so you never miss a single morsel along the way.

JR Raphael

JR Raphael is obsessed with productivity and finding clever ways to make the most of modern technology. He's written about almost everything imaginable at some point โ€” including even construction, crime, and climate in his past life as a TV news producer โ€” but these days, he's known primarily for his unmatched analysis of Google's Android and ChromeOS platforms (both of which he's covered closely since their starts) along with his knack for digging up off-the-beaten-path tech tips and treasures.

JR writes Computerworld's Android Intelligence column โ€” the internet's longest-standing Android column and one he's conducted since its inception way back in 2010 โ€” along with a variety of practical pieces about business productivity. That aside, he's the founder and editorial director of The Intelligence, where he waxes poetic with his calorie-packed Android Intelligence newsletter (a saucy sibling to the same-named CW column) as well as his cross-platform Cool Tools recommendation station. He is also a contributing editor at Fast Company and has written or been cited in everywhere from The Verge and Mental Floss to The New York Times, ABC World News, and USA Today.

(Random trivia: JR was actually quoted in Walter Isaacsonโ€™s best-selling biography of Steve Jobs โ€” for, erm, somewhat salacious and very appropriately Android-related reasons.)

Despite his refusal to comb his hair, JR's work has been honored with a gaggle of awards over the years โ€” including two Emmys, three Murrows, and a smattering of top distinctions from the Associated Press. He has also received a handful of coveted Azbee Awards for standout business reporting, most recently in recognition of his in-depth exposรฉ of Google's business-aimed Android phone recommendations.

In his spare time, JR enjoys breathing, chewing, and staring aimlessly into space.

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