Floating memories on Android 13
Android 13 (2022) runs Bubbles In Time without compromise — and this generation has its own texture: granular photo permissions pair perfectly with an on-device memory app.
Android 13 and the overlay layer
The floating layer rides Android's long-standing 'display over other apps' permission, which Android 13 grants through the standard settings flow the app opens for you. Once allowed, memory bubbles float over any app at your chosen interval; Android 13's scheduling rules cap wake frequency, which keeps the battery footprint negligible.
Photo access on this generation
Android 13's media permissions work cleanly with an on-device memory app: you grant access, choose your memories, and nothing ever leaves the phone — no account exists and the Play listing declares no data shared. On generations with partial photo access, you can expose only chosen images to the app, which suits a curated rotation perfectly.
The bottom line
Whatever Android generation your phone runs, the experience is the same shape: pick the memories, set the cadence, and let photos, videos, and saved messages drift back through your day. $2.99 once, everything included, on-device forever.
Quick answers
Is Bubbles In Time compatible with Android 13?
Yes — Android 13 fully supports the app's floating overlay and photo permissions through standard Android flows.
Can I control how often memories appear?
Yes — intervals from every 30 minutes to every 4 hours, plus a master pause switch.
What can become a memory?
Photos, videos, and saved message threads — plus a Mystery Photo option for surprise.