![]() ![]() What is truly new is the Home button icon on the AOD, because, you know, the S7 and S7 edge had an actual button. You can still set a daily schedule when AOD will be active. In this Edge clock mode you don't get notifications, by the way. What used to be a Night clock mode on the S7 edge is now a separate mode of the AOD, which means that you can no longer have the full blown AOD in the day, and the Night clock at. Only now it's been located in the Lock screen and security section of the settings menu, instead of Display, but there's a handy shortcut suggestion in the bottom of the Display section.Īnyway, there's a selection of analog and digital clocks to choose from, plus a calendar or image option. The AOD isn't different in principle to what we're familiar with from the S7's Nougat implementation. Before you get to those, however, there's an Always On Display to greet you, and all sorts of unlock options. The company's overlay now goes by the simple Samsung UX - the Grace UX name from the Note7 has seemingly died with the phablet itself.Īnd while the Nougat builds for the Galaxy S7 and S7 edge were mostly a direct reuse of the Note7's user interface design, the Galaxy S8's gets a thoroughly revised version with new iconography and other goodies. The Galaxy S8 boots Android Nougat, but in typical Samsung style there are plenty of customization on top.
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