With Android 14, your Galaxy phone gets a smarter flight mode

Flight (or airplane) mode is one of the most basic features you can find on a smartphone. Its job is to take a phone offline and disable all wireless connections on it, including cellular connectivity, Wi-Fi, and Bluetooth, which prevents the phone from making calls, sending and receiving messages, browsing the internet, and anything else that might require a cellular/data connection.

Flight mode is obviously designed for use in airplanes, as the signals and radio waves emitted by a phone can interfere with the flight’s communication system. You can also enable flight mode to reduce battery use, or to avoid human contact when you want a little alone time and want to be free from distractions.

But up in the air is where flight mode is used most, and for a long time, airlines were very strict about requiring every passenger to put their phone on flight mode, especially during landing and take-off. Things have changed in recent years, however, especially when it comes to Wi-Fi and Bluetooth.

Every modern phone (smart or otherwise) allows you to enable Wi-Fi and Bluetooth while flight mode is active. But what most of them don’t offer is an option to prevent Wi-Fi and Bluetooth from being disabled when the device is switched to flight mode.

Android 14 can keep Bluetooth and Wi-Fi enabled when flight mode is activated

Google is changing that with Android 14. On the latest version of the OS, if you enable Wi-Fi/Bluetooth while flight mode is active, the phone will remember that and keep Wi-Fi/Bluetooth turned on the next time you put it on flight mode. .

Naturally, this smarter flight/air mode will also be available on Samsung Galaxy phones and tablets that are eligible for Android 14. Samsung is currently running an Android 14/One UI 6.0 beta program for some devices, and we expect the final version of the software to start rolling out globally before the end of October.

Android 14 flight mode Wi-Fi and Bluetooth

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