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Android 13: Latest in OS

3 minutes 40 seconds read

Android 13 (Code name – Tiramisu)- the next big OS update is around the corner for users in July. Now, why is this update important? Users will get features, security and privacy enhancements that go beyond the little fixes provided in monthly updates. For developers, this latest rendition will introduce new features, tools & API’s to improve their productivity and build apps faster. 

Google had already rolled out the beta version of Tiramisu in April for developers to test their applications. 

Here are the key features that Android 13 will offer to developers and users: 

  1. New Copy Paste UI: Give confirmation on whether the content was successfully copied or not and provide a preview of the copied content once it is added to the clipboard.
  2. Predictive back gesture: This feature allows the user to decide whether to continue or stay in the current view by previewing the destination or other result of a back gesture before they fully complete it.
  3. Themed app icons: This feature will change colors of app icons dynamically based on the user’s chosen wallpaper and other themes.
  4. Quick Settings placement API: Using this API, users can change settings or take quick actions without leaving the context of an app.
  5. Better support for Multilingual users: Apps can use new platform APIs to set or get a user’s preferred, per-app language. Users can set different languages for different applications.
  6. Improved Japanese text wrapping: TextViews can now wrap text by Bunsetsu (the smallest unit of words that sounds natural) or phrases—instead of by character—for more polished and readable Japanese applications.
  7. Improved line heights for non-latin scripts: Android 13 improves the display of non-Latin scripts (such as Tamil, Burmese, Telugu, and Tibetan) by using a line height that’s adapted for each language. The new line heights prevent clipping and improve the positioning of characters.
  8. Text Conversion APIs: In Android 13, apps can use text conversion API to make search & auto completion faster and easier.
  9. Unicode Library Updates: Android 13 adds the latest improvements, fixes, and changes that are included in Unicode ICU 70, Unicode CLDR 40, and Unicode 14.0.
  10. Faster Hyphenation: Hyphenation makes wrapped text easier to read and helps make your UI more adaptive.
  11. Color Vector Fonts: Android 13 adds rendering support for COLR version 1 (COLRv1) fonts and updates system emoji to the COLRv1 format. 
  12. Bluetooth LE Audio: Android 13 adds built-in support for LE Audio, so developers should get the new capabilities for free on compatible devices. Users can receive high fidelity audio without sacrificing battery life.MIDI 2.0: Android 13 adds support for the new MIDI 2.0 standard, including the ability to connect MIDI 2.0 hardware through USB.

Android 13 will focus on user privacy & security as well:

  • Permissions: Android 13 has some changes in runtime permission of notifications, scanning of nearby wifi devices, media, alarms, background running body sensors & developer downgradable permissions.
  • Photo Picker: A new photo picker feature will provide safe, built-in way for users to select media files without granting access to their entire media library.
  • Safer exporting of context-registered receivers: A new security feature allows user to specify whether a particular broadcast receiver in the app should be exported and visible to other apps or not.
  • Hide sensitive content from clipboard: Apps that allow users to copy sensitive content to clipboard must add a flag to hide that content from previews.
  • Tablet and large-screens support: Android 13 builds on tablet optimizations introduced in Android 12 and 12L feature drop—including optimizations for system UI, better multitasking, and improved compatibility modes.

What else is interesting?

  • Notification Prompt Request: All the applications will seek user permission to send notifications.
  • Split-screen View: Users can long press on notifications and drag them down to get into split view. They no longer have to interrupt their process on one app to open up another.
  • Customization to give a different look to the phone: Users can choose from pre-made color variants. Once applied across the entire OS, it will accentuate wallpaper and style.
  • New Media Control. Users can customize look based on music that they are listening to, featuring the album’s artwork visible on lock screen and in notifications panel.

In a nutshell

Android has been the world’s most popular mobile operating system. The 13th addition will be more user-friendly than ever before. With significant features and tools, it intends to enhance developer productivity as well. From the business perspective, the modifications in the user interface and behavioral changes promises to help them grow customer satisfaction. It will help them bring out applications faster, experiment and develop mobile apps that can give a great experience to the users.

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Why Netflix Broke Itself: Was It Success Rewritten Through Platform Engineering?

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Let’s take a trip back in time—2008. Netflix was nothing like the media juggernaut it is today. Back then, they were a DVD-rental-by-mail service trying to go digital. But here’s the kicker: they hit a major pitfall. The internet was booming, and people were binge-watching shows like never before, but Netflix’s infrastructure couldn’t handle the load. Their single, massive system—what techies call a “monolith”—was creaking under pressure. Slow load times and buffering wheels plagued the experience, a nightmare for any platform or app development company trying to scale

That’s when Netflix decided to do something wild—they broke their monolith into smaller pieces. It was microservices, the tech equivalent of turning one giant pizza into bite-sized slices. Instead of one colossal system doing everything from streaming to recommendations, each piece of Netflix’s architecture became a specialist—one service handled streaming, another handled recommendations, another managed user data, and so on.

But microservices alone weren’t enough. What if one slice of pizza burns? Would the rest of the meal be ruined? Netflix wasn’t about to let a burnt crust take down the whole operation. That’s when they introduced the Circuit Breaker Pattern—just like a home electrical circuit that prevents a total blackout when one fuse blows. Their famous Hystrix tool allowed services to fail without taking down the entire platform. 

Fast-forward to today: Netflix isn’t just serving you movie marathons, it’s a digital powerhouse, an icon in platform engineering; it’s deploying new code thousands of times per day without breaking a sweat. They handle 208 million subscribers streaming over 1 billion hours of content every week. Trends in Platform engineering transformed Netflix into an application dev platform with self-service capabilities, supporting app developers and fostering a culture of continuous deployment.

Did Netflix bring order to chaos?

Netflix didn’t just solve its own problem. They blazed the trail for a movement: platform engineering. Now, every company wants a piece of that action. What Netflix did was essentially build an internal platform that developers could innovate without dealing with infrastructure headaches, a dream scenario for any application developer or app development company seeking seamless workflows.

And it’s not just for the big players like Netflix anymore. Across industries, companies are using platform engineering to create Internal Developer Platforms (IDPs)—one-stop shops for mobile application developers to create, test, and deploy apps without waiting on traditional IT. According to Gartner, 80% of organizations will adopt platform engineering by 2025 because it makes everything faster and more efficient, a game-changer for any mobile app developer or development software firm.

All anybody has to do is to make sure the tools are actually connected and working together. To make the most of it. That’s where modern trends like self-service platforms and composable architectures come in. You build, you scale, you innovate.achieving what mobile app dev and web-based development needs And all without breaking a sweat.

Source: getport.io

Is Mantra Labs Redefining Platform Engineering?

We didn’t just learn from Netflix’s playbook; we’re writing our own chapters in platform engineering. One example of this? Our work with one of India’s leading private-sector general insurance companies.

Their existing DevOps system was like Netflix’s old monolith: complex, clunky, and slowing them down. Multiple teams, diverse workflows, and a lack of standardization were crippling their ability to innovate. Worse yet, they were stuck in a ticket-driven approach, which led to reactive fixes rather than proactive growth. Observability gaps meant they were often solving the wrong problems, without any real insight into what was happening under the hood.

That’s where Mantra Labs stepped in. Mantra Labs brought in the pillars of platform engineering:

Standardization: We unified their workflows, creating a single source of truth for teams across the board.

Customization:  Our tailored platform engineering approach addressed the unique demands of their various application development teams.

Traceability: With better observability tools, they could now track their workflows, giving them real-time insights into system health and potential bottlenecks—an essential feature for web and app development and agile software development.

We didn’t just slap a band-aid on the problem; we overhauled their entire infrastructure. By centralizing infrastructure management and removing the ticket-driven chaos, we gave them a self-service platform—where teams could deploy new code without waiting in line. The results? Faster workflows, better adoption of tools, and an infrastructure ready for future growth.

But we didn’t stop there. We solved the critical observability gaps—providing real-time data that helped the insurance giant avoid potential pitfalls before they happened. With our approach, they no longer had to “hope” that things would go right. They could see it happening in real-time which is a major advantage in cross-platform mobile application development and cloud-based web hosting.

The Future of Platform Engineering: What’s Next?

As we look forward, platform engineering will continue to drive innovation, enabling companies to build scalable, resilient systems that adapt to future challenges—whether it’s AI-driven automation or self-healing platforms.

If you’re ready to make the leap into platform engineering, Mantra Labs is here to guide you. Whether you’re aiming for smoother workflows, enhanced observability, or scalable infrastructure, we’ve got the tools and expertise to get you there.

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