In July,
I purchased my first Android-based device, the LG G3. Soon after, a
friend with a Samsung Galaxy Mega attempted to duplicate a feature he
had seen while testing my handset. He couldn’t because his phone had a
different build of Android installed. To make matters worse, the phone
couldn’t be upgraded to the newer version because Samsung wouldn’t allow
it.
Welcome to the world of Android fragmentation, which has grown in recent months, according to OpenSignal.
To date, there have been 18,796 distinct Android-based devices seen
in 2014. Of those, 43 percent are Samsung devices. In total, just 20.9
percent of devices have the latest version of Android installed, KitKat.
This compares to the 91 percent who use iOS 7.
OpenSignal notes that Android fragmentation can be “extremely
challenging and time-consuming” to developers. They also say it has a
“great number of benefits,” noting that “The availability of cheap
Android phones (rarely running the most recent version) means that they
have a much greater global reach than iOS, so app developers have a
wider audience to build for.”
I don’t agree. Unofficially, Apple guarantees that an iPhone or iPad
purchased today will be able to run the latest version of iOS for three
years. As my friend found out, being on the latest version of Android is
sometimes not even an option — even for a relatively new device. The
first-generation Samsung Galaxy Mega arrived in April 2013. His was
purchased in February of this year.
What’s beneficial about that?
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