Google might finally fix the biggest flaw with Android’s Calling CardsYou could finally get to choose how you own Calling Card appears remotely.

Google might finally fix the biggest flaw with Android’s Calling Cards
TL;DR
  • Calling Cards offer a great way to customize how incoming calls appear on your own phone.
  • So far, though, the system has lacked a way for you to choose how your Calling Card will appear remotely.
  • A new “My calling card” screen could finally give you that opportunity.

Apple’s got its Contact Posters on iOS, and earlier this year we saw Calling Cards arrive for Android, letting users customize what they see when their friends and family call. Google’s already been working to add new options there, like letting you fine-tune the fonts, but this whole time there’s been a fundamental problem with how Calling Cards work — and now it looks like Google might actually get around to resolving it.

Authority Insights

You're reading an Authority Insights story. Subscribe to our new Authority Insights newsletter for more exclusive reports, app teardowns, leaks, and in-depth tech coverage you won't find anywhere else.

By signing up, you agree to our Terms of Use and acknowledge the data practices in our Privacy Policy. You may unsubscribe at any time.

For as great as Calling Cards are, anyone who’s familiar with Contact Posters on iOS will be quick to point out Google’s major limitation: While you can give all your contacts their own custom looks, there’s no way for that to work the other way around, and let you define how your own Calling Card should appear on remote devices.

You could finally get to choose how you own Calling Card appears remotely.Stephen Schenck2025-10-23T18:41:35.000Z{}

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Here’s an early look at how app lock and other Android 17 changes are coming togetherCan't get enough of those translucent volume bars.

New iPhone Fold leak reveals cameras, but does it beat the Galaxy Z Fold 7?A fresh leak suggests the foldable iPhone may have a pair of 48MP cameras and a smaller display than previously rumored.

Samsung Galaxy M36 announced with Exynos 1380 and 5,000mAh battery