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