Netflix once again introduces new features for Android, but not iOS (yet)

The ability to download videos in their entirety to a mobile device has been a nice (yet lesser-known) feature of Netflix and similar services for a few years now, but the experience has not been without its frustrations. A new update to the Netflix mobile app aims to make the feature better.

Starting today, Android phone or tablet users on version 7.64 or higher can start viewing a video download in the Netflix mobile app, even if that video hasn’t finished downloading to a device. The company’s newsroom post announcing the new feature says it’s intended for times when “unreliable Wi-Fi or a maxed-out data plan” prevents a video from fully downloading.

So if you tried to download a movie on airport Wi-Fi before your coast-to-coast flight but only got to 80 percent before you had to board, you can now at least watch part of the movie while waiting for an opportunity to finish the download. Once you have a reliable connection again, the download can pick up where it left off, even if you started watching the video in the interim.

You’ll find the partially downloaded videos in the same downloads tab as any fully downloaded files.

The feature is currently available only on Android devices, but Netflix VP of Product Innovation Keela Robison writes that the company will “begin testing on iOS in the coming months.” The download feature was never available on the desktop website, and that remains the case here.

This isn’t the first time Android has gotten first dibs on a Netflix mobile-app feature. Netflix introduced “Smart Downloads” a couple of years after releasing the basic download feature. That addition deleted a TV episode after you watched it and automatically downloaded the next one. It came to iOS much later. And then there’s “Downloads For You,” a feature that automatically downloads content that Netflix recommends based on your past viewing.

Downloads For You is still available only on Android, but Netflix says it will start testing the feature on iOS soon, too.