Not exact matches
(They even got the
finger movements right —
as someone who plays the guitar, I'm always paying close attention to technique, and the animators didn't take any
shortcuts here.)
Preprogrammed
shortcuts let you use it
as a shutter key when you're taking selfies, hide information when you enable the phone's privacy mode, and launch apps corresponding with certain
fingers.
If you want to see quick settings, such
as Airplane Mode or Wi - Fi, you need to either tap on the
Shortcuts tab at the top or reconfigure the settings so that dragging a
finger on the right half of the screen brings down the
Shortcuts panel.
It even supports multi-touch gestures, such
as two -
finger scrolling and three -
finger swipes to switch windows, and it includes DPI adjustment
shortcuts for shrinking and magnifying text on the fly.
Fingerprint
shortcuts lets users swipe a
finger to an icon directly on the lock screen, which will unlock the device and open the application
as the same time, while Web sign - in lets users utilize their fingerprints to sign into various websites in lieu of a password.
The notification tray expands from the top,
as usual, but swiping with two
fingers brings you straight to the settings tab within the shade, where you can customize your icons and
shortcuts to our liking.
Control-wise, the mouse cursor functions just like your
finger for the touch interface, with other touch actions set up
as keyboard
shortcuts, or in the controls sidebar.
Elsewhere the swipe - down notifications bar has the same access to hardware toggles (customisable)
as it had before which is really convenient, and the two
finger swipe to access the full list of
shortcuts is really handy, especially
as there are so many options available in the S5 - certainly far more than the rather restrictive default Android option.