So, what’s this “Min Mode” all about?
To make this work without destroying your battery, it uses the same low-power tech as the regular AOD—think limited brightness and a super-low refresh rate. Developers will have to create a special, stripped-down component for their apps to even be allowed to use it.
Google Maps is reportedly the first app in line to get this treatment. Imagine having monochrome, turn-by-turn directions constantly visible on your screen during a long drive, all without the massive battery drain of keeping the full Maps app open.
Why this will make a huge difference on Android
Recently discovered evidence that Google Maps might be the first app to use this “Min Mode”. | Images credit — Android Authority
Google’s “Min Mode” looks like its answer to this, but it might be even more practical since it’s not just for when the phone is charging. This is about making your phone useful even when it’s “off” in a car mount or just sitting on your desk.
The report notes this will likely be a new developer API, which is the most important part. You can easily imagine fitness apps showing live workout stats, music apps displaying minimalist controls, or smart home apps giving you a persistent status of your lights. The potential is huge, but it all hinges on developers actually using it.
This is interesting
My one big concern? Battery life. The entire point of an AOD is that it sips power. The success of “Min Mode” will live or die based on developer restraint. The Google Maps example—monochrome, essential data only—sounds perfect. But if developers get greedy and try to cram colorful, animated junk into this mode, it’s just going to become a new, “persistent” way to kill our batteries.
If Google enforces strict rules and developers focus on genuine utility, this could be a fantastic change. I’m cautiously optimistic this will make my phone’s “off” screen genuinely useful for the first time.
