![]() ![]() Two of those are active by default, but luckily, you can hide all that. The notification area has got better as well - it has one row to show the time and edit options, the next one the quick toggles, then optionally a row of brightness slider, another optional row with volume scrubbers, and the final optional row has Screen Sharing and File Sharing shortcuts. You can opt for a different Home Mode though - Home with App Drawer, which will bring back the app drawer. You can organize your apps in folders, you can even hide some of them if you don't want them to be visible all the time. There is no app drawer this time around - everything is put on the homescreens. The latter offers at a glance info from LG Health, upcoming calendar events, music controls, IR remotes, and Smart settings. The homescreens are the usual affair - they support shortcuts and widgets, you can change wallpapers and effects, and you can opt for the Smart Bulletin homescreen. One proprietary customization feature lets you add extra on-screen buttons (up to 5) - one to launch Capture+, QSlide, or open the notification area (if you don't fancy reaching for the top edge). The G5 has only the default LG theme, but you can get more from LG's SmartWorld Store. The Always On display visualisations are fairly customizable and it support themes. Of course, the whole thing is intended to be power efficient and LG claims that the small secondary screen mode eats through 0.8% of battery per hour. You can also swap the clock for a lot less useful signature if that is your desire (you still get the notification row). They are intended to stay lit up with a date and time, as well as notifications. Having to rely on an LCD panel where you can't simply light up only a portion of the screen, LG has come up with a rather unorthodox solution.Īpparently, the main 5.3-inch display has a second controller included, that only has power over a limited number of pixels on the screen. When the phone's screen is off, a portion of it still remains lit-up to display the time and notifications. LG G5 offers an Always-on screen as has become trendy recently. Your index finger (on either hand) naturally rests on the Power button, making this solution comfortably ambidextrous. Since it's on the Power key, all you have to do is tap on it - the sensor is always on, and it works lightning fast. The fingerprint reader is the most secure option. We doubt that you would need to resort to knocking (or rather tapping) when you have a fingerprint reader at your disposal. For those unfamiliar, it is essentially a secret knock pattern shared between you and your phone. To unlock the phone, you can use double tap or LG's more secure Knock Code. The lockscreen supports notifications and shortcuts, as usual. ![]() #G5 LG ON BUTTON SHORTCUTS ANDROID#It's built on top of Android 6.0.1 Marshmallow, and brings new features as well as a cleaner look to get closer to the Material Design aesthetics. The latest G-series flagship has a tradition of bringing a new version of the LG UX, and we are up to v5.0 with the G5. ![]()
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