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Yesterday β€” 3 February 2026Main stream

Android 16 QPR3 splits Adaptive Connectivity into Wi-Fi stability and battery saving

By:Yash
3 February 2026 at 11:26

Google is finally admitting what Pixel users have known for years. With Android 16 QPR3 Beta 2, Adaptive Connectivity is no longer a single, vague toggle buried in network settings. It is now split into two clear controls, each with a specific job and a clearer promise.

Until now, Adaptive Connectivity lived as a lone on-off switch under Settings, Network and internet. Google said it would extend battery life and manage connections automatically. You flipped it on and hoped the phone made the right call when Wi-Fi turned unreliable or power drain lagged in.

In QPR3 Beta 2 (via 9to5Google), Adaptive Connectivity becomes two separate toggles, both enabled by default.

One focuses purely on stability.Β Auto switch to mobile network does exactly what the name suggests. When Wi-Fi quality drops, the phone prioritizes staying connected, even if that means jumping to mobile data.

The second toggle is about restraint. Optimize network for battery life chooses the most efficient connection with power savings in mind, not raw reliability.

Android 16 QPR3 Adaptive Connectivity

Technically, the change appears tied to an update of Adaptive Connectivity Services, recently pushed via Google System Services as version p.2026.01.

In Android 16 QPR3 Beta 2, the old single toggle is gone. In its place sit the two new options, described in plain language, inside the same Network and internet menu.

This split matters more than it may look at first glance. One more QPR3 beta is expected later this month. The stable Android 16 QPR3 release is still lined up for March.

The post Android 16 QPR3 splits Adaptive Connectivity into Wi-Fi stability and battery saving appeared first on Sammy Fans.

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