Creating an ‘Action button’ on Android: A guide inspired by iPhone-15

Creating an ‘Action button’ on Android: A guide inspired by iPhone-15

If you’re reading this column, ​odds are, you don’t have a lot of iPhone envy.

Believe me, I’m right there with ya. But much as we may enjoy the (ahem) greener pastures here in the land o’ Googley matters, every now⁣ and then,⁢ Apple does come up with a genuinely interesting idea for its iPhone⁤ devotees.

And amidst‍ all the magical and revolutionary ⁢blathering⁤ at last week’s iPhone 15 event, one such intriguing addition made its way ​to the surface. It’s a new “Action button” that sits on the side of the iPhone 15 Pro, exclusively, and is able to summon⁢ a single specific command of the phone-owner’s choosing.

It ⁢really is a clever concept — ’cause for all our focus on on-screen actions, there’s something to be said for a simple physical switch. It’s always there and available, and you can find​ it⁣ without any thought or effort and keep a common command ‌at your fingertips for easy ongoing⁣ access.

And here’s a little secret: You don’t need Apple’s latest ‍iGizmo‍ to enjoy such an advantage. In fact, you can create a similar⁤ sort of setup on ⁣any Android phone you’re using — with even more flexibility, power,‍ and potential ⁤in place.

[Want even more advanced Android knowledge? Check out my free Android Shortcut Supercourse to learn tons of time-saving tricks for your phone.]

Let me show you how.

Your Android ‘Action button’ adventure

Before we dive into the specifics, take a second to ⁤enjoy a quick bite of delicious irony with me: It’s the very fact that ⁤Android allows a more open approach to device ownership that empowers us to not ⁢only emulate but actually one⁤ up the latest and greatest feature Apple’s offering on ‍its top-of-the-line device.

Unlike iOS, where ⁢the entire experience of using an iDevice is tightly controlled and you’re ⁣permitted only ⁤to navigate around your phone in the way that‌ Apple thinks you should, here on Android, you’ve got all sorts of⁤ options. You can make things work⁢ in practically any way you want, and the app developer community is encouraged to create tools to⁤ support that level of flexibility and customization.

It’s that exact philosophy ⁢that makes this trick possible — and,⁢ specifically, it’s a spectacular ​little app called Key Mapper ⁣that helps makes​ it‍ happen.

In the simplest possible terms,​ Key Mapper lets you⁤ assign extra actions to any physical button ⁣on your phone. So even ​without having a dedicated and space-required “Action button,” we can use it to create the same ​basic idea ⁣within any of your ⁣existing buttons — like the⁢ power and volume keys. ‌And we can take ‍things much further than what Apple allows and ‍assign all sorts of advanced custom actions to those areas for on-demand ‌access.

For example:


You​ could⁣ make it so that long-pressing your phone’s volume-down button summons Google Assistant and long-pressing volume-up opens ⁣your system settings or maybe an app you access​ often.
You could tell Key Mapper to make​ those ​functions ‌available only ⁤when media isn’t actively playing, to…

2023-09-22 15:24:02
Article from www.computerworld.com rnrn

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