The Android 5.1 Lollipop has been a hot news topic since last month, when reports showed the appearance of the new minor version update in the Android One phones in Indonesia. Google however, took almost a month after the first appearance to make it official, which finally happened last week. Now, the changelog of the Android 5.1 Lollipop is also official, which can be listed as:
HD voice calling
High Definition voice calling allows for crystal-clear audio quality on voice calls over supported networks. O2 is pretty much the only UK not to support this feature, so this feature should really benefit a lot of Android users in this country.
Wi-Fi and Bluetooth shortcuts
Anyone who finds themselves flitting from Wi-Fi hotspot to Wi-Fi hotspot will know how irritating it can be plunging into the settings menu every time you need to make a new connection.
Android 5.1 solves that quibble in style, by providing specific connection access from the drop-down quick settings menu. This manifests itself as a little down arrow below each of the usual Wi-Fi and Bluetooth toggles.
It doesn’t sound like a big addition, but this is one of those little things that we’ve found ourselves tutting over for years.
Device Protection
This security improvement ensures that your phone will remain locked even if a thief submits it to a factory reset. The only way anyone is getting access you your phone is if they know your Google account details.
So that should just be you, then.
Dual-SIM support
Just as the name suggests, the ability to run two SIM cards simultaneously is now right there in Android 5.1.
This feature is popular in developing countries, where handsets are often shared and multiple accounts held, but it hasn’t really caught on here in the West yet. We can see how it could, though, with the potential for having a single handset containing both your work and personal SIM cards.
Interruptions improvements
Android 5.0 has attracted criticism from some for leaving out a true silent mode setting. Well, there still isn’t a silent mode in Android 5.1, but the interruptions function has been improved.
You still get those None, Priority, or All options when tweaking the volume, but now you don’t have to disable your alarms when you simply want to silence that ringer.
There’s a new ‘Until next alarm’ option that sees to that.
Heads-up notifications
Notifications were one of the strongest features of Android 5.0 Lollipop, but that doesn’t mean that they were perfect.
One notable improvement in Android 5.1 is to the heads-up notification system – those alerts that slide into view while you’re using the phone.
Previously, when you slid these alerts out of the way of what you were doing (watching a video, for example), Android 5.0 would dismiss the notification altogether. Now it just removes that notification from your immediate view, and you can pick it up manually at a later date by dragging down the notification menu.
Fixes and improvements
There are around 1,400 tweaks and fixes going on under the hood of Android 5.1, most of which you won’t even notice. We don’t feel particularly inclined to list them, either, as the majority of them are pretty minor.
Undoubtedy the most notable of these fixes, however, is for the infamous memory leak issue, which brought many a Nexus phone (and the update schedules of many Android manufacturers) to its knees.
In many ways, these little technical fixes are the most important facet of Android 5.1, as they should result in the first properly stable version of Lollipop.