I'm excited for Android 17 on my Google Pixel just because of this one major productivity feature

by · Android Police

Since I loaded Android 17 Beta 3 onto my Google Pixel 8, I have been digging through the usual UI tweaks and under-the-hood optimizations, but one feature has completely stopped me in my tracks.

It isn’t a customizable Google search bar or a flashy new wallpaper. Instead, it’s the arrival of multitasking bubbles for any app. While we have lived with chat bubbles for years, Google has finally broken them out of the messaging silo.

Just after a few days of using it, I’m convinced this is the killer feature of the Android 17 release.

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Breaking the Chat barrier

Before Android 17, whenever I saw a bubble on my screen, I knew exactly what it was: a conversation. It was a UI element strictly reserved for social interactions. Now, it’s a universal productivity tool.

In the past, we have seen a few developers try to hack their way around this. Take OneNote, for example. They have had their floatie for a while, which allows you to trigger a floating badge to jot down a quick thought.

But let’s be real. Because there was no native, system-level support for this in Android, the implementation was always hit-or-miss.

Sometimes the bubble would vanish into the void. Other times, it would awkwardly overlap with my keyboard, and it almost never felt like a natural part of the OS.

With this update on my Pixel 8, that ‘hacky’ feeling is gone. Because this is now backed into the core of Android 17, any app — from my calculator to my browser can be turned into a persistent, floating window that behaves exactly how it’s supposed to.

I don’t have to wait for the developer to implement this. It turns the entire OS into a flexible canvas rather than a rigid stack of full-screen cards.

Desktop-class multitasking on a mobile screen

This is where the wow factor really kicks in. On a standard-sized screen like the Pixel 8, split-screen multitasking has always felt like a compromise, leaving you with two tiny rectangles that barely see enough content in either.

But with Android 17’s bubbles, it feels like I have finally unlocked desktop-class window management in the palm of my hand.

For instance, I can scroll through X, and instead of jumping back and forth to my notes, I have OneNote living in a persistent bubble on the right edge of my screen.

When I see a quote or a link I want to save, I tap the bubble, the note expands over the feed, I paste it, and tap away to collapse instantly. It’s fluid, fast, and doesn’t break my flow.

I will also have Chrome open full-screen while keeping OneNote bubble-locked. I can cross-reference data or copy snippets without ever losing my place in the article.

I can have my banking app, Google Sheets, and the Calculator as a floating bubble. It turns my phone from a device that runs apps into a device that runs tasks.

It’s the first time mobile multitasking hasn’t felt like a chore, but like a power-user feature that makes the Pixel 8 feel like a much larger, more capable machine.

Performance on the Pixel 8

One of the biggest concerns with a feature this heavy is whether the hardware can actually keep up.

I was skeptical about how the Tensor G3 would handle it. But after a week of pushing Android 17 Beta 3 on my Pixel 8, I’m impressed by how snappy the experience feels.

The animations are fluid. Tapping a stack of bubbles to expand them feels instant, and dragging them across the screen doesn’t result in frame drops I feared.

The 120Hz display keeps everything feeling buttery smooth. The RAM management has been solid as well. On my Pixel 8, the bubbled apps stay live.

The phone doesn’t get uncomfortably warm, and the battery hasn’t taken the massive hit I anticipated.

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Looking forward to Android 17

While the multitasking bubbles are the clear star of the show for me, spending time with Android 17 Beta on my Pixel 8 has made me realize just how much quality-of-life polish is packed into this release.

There is a new frosted glass blur effect throughout the UI. I also appreciate the Google Search bar customization options and the separate Wi-Fi and mobile data tiles.

Between the dedicated volume slider for Gemini and the redesigned screen recorder, Android 17 feels like it’s finally giving power users the granular control we have been asking for.

The productivity king

Ultimately, Android 17 feels like the first time Google has truly cracked the code on mobile multitasking for smaller screens.

We are finally moving past the clunky split-screen era and into a more fluid, desktop-like experience that lives right under our thumbs.

If this is what Beta 3 looks like, I can’t wait to see how polished the final version feels when it hits stable.

If you have installed Android 17 Beta and haven’t tried pinning your favorite notes app or calculator to a bubble yet, you are missing out on the best reason to press that update button. June can’t come soon enough.