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Google has a secret feature for Android M: A built-in themes engine

google has a secret feature for android m built in themes engine samsung galaxy s6 theme store
Robert Nazarian/Digital Trends
Theme engines have become all the rage this year. HTC launched its own Themes app on the One M9 and Samsung is doing exactly the same with the Galaxy S6 and Galaxy S6 Edge, but it appears that Google will incorporate themes into the stock version of Android. Users are finding out that they can apply themes in the Android M Developer Preview, something Google did not mention in its keynote at Google I/O.

Theme engines allow you to customize the look of your Android phone or tablet’s user interface. This includes the colors of the stock apps such as the Dialer and Contacts, as well as the shapes and colors of all the app icons.

Android M is using Sony’s RRO (Runtime Resource Overlay) theme engine, which was added to the Android Open Source Project (AOSP) last year. Without getting too complicated, the RRO allows you to change the look of an app without actually changing the code of the app. It’s what Sony uses as its themes engine on Xperia phones and tablets.

Up to this point there was no easy way to theme your phone if there wasn’t a built-in themes engine on the device. Users needed to root their device and install a custom ROM, which isn’t for the faint of heart. Unfortunately, the Android M Developer Preview still requires root, but we are hopeful that will change when it’s officially launched in the fall. The big difference is that a custom ROM is not required and users can simply install the Layers Manager to get started. Then it’s a matter of finding various themes to download from Google Play.

It’s still possible that Google won’t offer the themes engine beyond rooted users when Android M moves out of preview. One theory is that Google is doing this to make it easier for manufacturers to implement their own built-in theme engines. That might be the case, but it still shouldn’t stop Google from making it easily accessible to those using a stock Android device such as a Nexus 6. Google knows that Android users typically like to customize their devices more than iPhone users, so it wouldn’t surprise us if this is something it’s prepping for the official release of Android M.

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Robert Nazarian
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