You still swipe up from the bottom (dragging your finger up the screen further than when you trigger the app dock with the same gesture), but the quick settings are now all right - aligned, while a multitasking grid appears on the left side.
But you can
still swipe up from the bottom to open the app drawer, swipe left to right to get to Google Now, etc..
Not exact matches
Swiping to the left-most screen brings
up Flipboard, for example, while getting any apps that take advantage of the curves
still require signing
up for a separate Samsung account.
That seems a direct
swipe at Tinder, which is
still best known for hooking people
up with people they find attractive by showing their photo, age and first name.
Even after a few weeks of wearing the Moto 360, I
still couldn't figure out how to bring
up email notifications or the heart - rate monitor — are you supposed to
swipe the watch's face
up, down, left or right?
Even though the terms around
swiping have become universal language among single people, a mutual
swipe is
still the equivalent of someone walking
up to you in real life and introducing themselves for the first time.
We had some disagreements over the decorations, the quantity of icing & glitter (
swipe to see), and how many she was allowed to sample, but A did the washing
up and I think we're
still friends.
You can
still type this way, and you can always
swipe it back
up to full size.
Users can sometimes
swipe up on ads to visit mobile sites, a feature Tommy Hilfiger and L'Oreal have experimented with, but shoppable ads are
still uncommon and require the user to input payment and shipping information to complete any resulting transaction.
This shade brightens
up my face and even if I wear it with just a thin
swipe of liner on the eyes and no other makeup, it
still looks fabulous.
The second is that Tinder is
still a bit buggy, and users have reported seeing left -
swiped users popping back
up into their queue.
On the Nexus 7, however, it was a little hard to tell without having an Ice Cream Sandwich device side by side, and
still didn't keep
up with our
swiping fingers as quickly as they do on a recent iPad.
Scrolling, however,
still seems to be a mixed bag; this very site
still putters along, but other less - image - heavy sites are more fluid when it comes to long
swipes up and down the page.
Swiping down from the top
still brings
up the shortcuts menu and the settings button.
That said, in actual use I haven't overly missed the chapter marks at this point and even though they're unseen you can
still use them to skip forward and back by
swiping up and down on the screen.
BlackBerry was big on the fact that everything is done in real time;
swiping in one direction will bring
up one's personal calendar or inbox, for instance, and can be done while
still running a video or other program at the same time through what it calls «BlackBerry Peek.»
Swipe up / down on the right half to enter first person view when standing
still or to drive cars high or low.
You'll
still need to
swipe up from the bottom to get to the home screen.
The new interface, which you
still access by
swiping up from the bottom of the screen, includes the same toggles, but with the option to add more.
The settings menu is
still unnecessarily convoluted and fragmented into tabs, I can't access the apps list with a
swipe up from the bottom of the home screen (a surprisingly big annoyance compared to the Google Pixel and many other Android alternatives), and LG seriously weighs its phones down with carrier bloatware.
If you spin the dial
up you'll bring
up the notification pane, but spinning downward doesn't lower the quick settings menu (you
still need to
swipe down).
There's no longer an icon for the app drawer, but you can
still see all your apps with a single
swipe up from the bottom of the screen.
Swiping up from the bottom to go home or access recent apps takes a little getting used to and there is
still no back button.
To get to it you
swipe up from the bottom but keep in mind that it you
swipe up from the bottom right on the lock screen you will
still get the camera.
These are
still present in places like the Dialer though, where
swiping to the right calls a contact and
swiping left messages them instead of just sliding between the tabs
up top.
I also found that the lockscreen could be a bit persnickety at times and would
still ask me to
swipe up even after fingerprint authentication, but I'm assuming this is a bug that'll be corrected in a software update, as it only happened once in a blue moon.
Swiping down from the top
still brings
up the shortcuts menu and the settings button.
The home screen launcher
still swipes over to Google Now, though you do lose the Pixel Launcher's long - press app functions, as well as the
swipe up gesture to access the app drawer — there's the old - fashioned button taking
up space in your dock instead.
The app drawer for example
still utilizes a dedicated button in your dock instead of the
swipe up that pure Android uses.
You
still have to be deliberate with your taps and
swipes, or else you'll find yourself pausing the music when you really meant to turn
up the volume.
You can
still use AL3's covers and shutters in the dock, but obviously a
swipe up gesture will launch the app drawer instead, so you'll have to reverse your cover / shutter
swipe direction.
The «What's New» orb introduced on the Xperia Z2 in the
swipe -
up menu alongside Google Now is
still present, with no way to turn it off.
Snapchat
still opens
up right to the camera, making it fast to take a quick snapshot, and the program
still relies on
swiping to navigate through different options.
I use it all the time on my Plus, and it's
still here --- only now you
swipe down about halfway
up the icon dock from the home indicator.
Swiping down from the top of the Watch
still shows you notifications, but now, when you
swipe up from the bottom of the Watch, you have a mini command center right there.
I turn off the
swipe down gestures while using Touch Circle so I can scroll through the dots, but I leave
swipe up enabled so I can
still swipe to access the app drawer.