A Look at the Amount of Time Smartphone Vendors Have Taken To Roll out Major Android Updates To Their Handsets, and How Things Are Beginning To Improve (androidauthority.com)
Most Android smartphone vendors have been notorious for the time they take to roll out the newest Android OS updates to their respective handsets. To tackle this, Google in 2017 announced Project Treble, which bypasses some middlemen in delivering new updates to consumers. With Project Treble now supported by all Android phone makers, in theory updates should roll out to us faster than before. To test this, news blog AndroidAuthority looked at the data to see where things stand.
From the report: On average, Nougat updates took about 192 days to reach key devices, while Oreo was slightly faster at 170. Android Pie updates hit devices much faster, averaging just 118 days from Google's launch to significant OEM rollout. That's a significant improvement, though we're still waiting on updates from LG and HTC, which could drag this average back up. Most manufacturers are faster at providing updates now, but a few are slower. Huawei, Samsung, and Xiaomi were noticeably quicker this time around, bringing updates to key devices before the end of 2018. OnePlus and Sony were especially fast, but they've always been speedier than most. Disappointingly, Motorola has rolled out updates to its flagship Z series slower over the last few years.
And who thinks google is ever going to be useful to the average person? I certainly dont
I've never seen this offered on any phone I've ever owned, ever.
I wish Google still "Don't be evil."
I had a business selling G1 (Still an excellent form factor I hope they bring it back.) and I would Root and Superuser them and install custom Roms.
They were really amazing, the early Android modding scene had a lot of potential.
25% better battery life.
40% better performance.
More customization options.
Excellent GUIs.
But I ramble.
Anyway nowadays it's hard to Root and get SuperUser and I don't understand why.
It's actually put a lifespan on Android which is sad.
Now Android is like Facebook, constantly getting worse and losing sight of what made it better than alternatives.
I don't want to be one of those old people who think things were better in the past, give me something to work with.
With Project Treble now supported by all Android phone makers, in theory updates should roll out to us faster than before.
This is a rather interesting edit of a sentence from the actual linked article which says:
With Project Treble now supported by key Android flagships, in theory updates should roll out to us faster than ever before.
msmash, you do realize that the two versions do mot mean the same thing, right?
You don't want them. Yet they still come.
Corporatism != Free Market
My Windows Phones have more support than any Android POS I've owned.
Planned Obsolescence isn't going anywhere. Its what keeps device makers in business.
Look, it’s great that updates are available sooner on “key devices”, but the fact that this is being cited as something praiseworthy is rather indicative of how broken the situation remains. It took 192 days on average for Nougat to even become available on a subset of devices. 170 for Oreo. 118 for Pie. Meanwhile, iOS has always taken 0 days: it was available to all compatible devices immediately upon its release.
And availability is just half the problem. If availability is staggered, you have a harder time encouraging people to update (or even making them aware of the update), which hampers the deployment rate. Improving the speed of deployment needs to be the end goal. Improving availability is just a necessary step towards clearing hurdles that are in the way.
The Galaxy S3 was my last Samsung "flagship". Not only was it stupidly expensive for what it was, but the updates were slow to come and they seemed to leave the phone worse-off. I'm now settled with the Xiaomi Mi Mix line (switched from the cheaper but almost as good Mi line partly because of supporting T-Mobile LTE when I travel to the US), cheaper, better in most respects and updates don't leave the phone worse off. And according to TFA the updates come quicker too, although if that was my main concern I'd probably be looking at Android One phones or something like that...
Violence is the last refuge of the incompetent. Polar Scope Align for iOS
Does this cover Android-based tablets?
Even if it does...what I'm getting from this is that even my most recent Android device--running 6.0 (Marshmallow) is eventually going to go to its grave with the exact same OS it was born with. The apps get updated all the time (to the point of being more annoying than Windows is with its updates), but the OS is the same one it was shipped with, still susceptible to countless vulnerabilities that have been discovered and long fixed elsewhere.
I guess I should forget about my older 4.x devices also.
In hindsight - I have 5 Android-based tablets I can't trust to do any serious transaction on, because they're all running different versions of an OS that are all known to have huge security holes.
How fucking dumb should I have to be to believe any newer device I spend even more money on is going to come with an OS that *will* get patched, "for real this time"?
My Asus Zenfone 3 went from android 6 to 8. How many other companies have upgraded their phone OS like that?
That phone was getting OS patches and upgrades often. I don't know how's it's doing now, as I've passed that phone
on for their ROG phone. I've gotten 5 patches for that phone since I bought it in late Oct. last year. And yes, it's the
most godly phone I've ever owned. Just look it up and just drool over the hardware packed into it.
What users see: "Treble lets them get me updates 2x faster" What LG's management sees: "Treble lets me fire half my update staff and still meet existing goals"
I donâ(TM)t see how it is remotely acceptable for security updates to take four months to arrive on devices. I find the whole smartphone OS landscape wildly depressing. Itâ(TM)s either walled gardens or insecure advertising-infested UI shitfest.
Where is my update for my Samsung Galaxy Player?
It's still using Gingerbread.
Manufacturer has no incentive to deliver good quality updates, they already sold you device. Therefore most of updates are poorly tested and make your device worse. Apple is no exception as their updates render perfectly working device nearly useless and they force updates on you. After couple of my apple devices became unusable after iOS update I refuse to purchase anymore apple devices.
On android situation is not better but at least they do not force you to upgrade. To me updates should be only security related. If you want all new features, get a new device.
Update is like putting a hammer body on a corolla power-train. It is still a corolla, except now it has to carry 6 tonne of extra body weigh. It does not work right and struggles to do even basic tasks.Google play services is prime example of this, it updates without your permission and it is growing in size with every update without providing any new functionality to you. It only spies on you more. It makes your perfectly working device slow and consumes your battery without mercy.
If device released with poor software it would be poorly reviewed and will flop in the market place. You can however put a bad update on it and few people will comment, except for the ones affected. Just search for Android problems after updates and you will see what I mean.
I have a Samsung Note 8, the security patch is from October 1, 2018 and I got an old 8.0.0 Android... I just check and Samsung said that my phone is up to date with the last software! Yeah! Right !
Ceci n'est pas une Signature !
Interesting how the Moto Z got Oreo after 129 days. I have a Moto G5 Plus and Motorola was vapor-waring Oreo for over a year. Oreo was released August 2017 and my phone didn't get Oreo until November 2018, after at least a year of "It's coming in two months, we promise!"
My Nexus 5 hasn't seen an update in ages. It still works fine and isn't a stupidly-large phablet, as seems to be the rage today, but it only received updates for a couple of years. If Google's going to start shaking their corporate finger at companies that are slow to provide updates or cut off updates early, they should start at home.
A quote:
Hopefully this will help reduce the re-done overhead across the phone manufacturers, hopefully reducing updates down the road. By 50%? I hope.
Don't steal. The government hates competition.
If you want super duper fast updates, you go with the pixel phones, or iPhones. A few Android vendors are "fast" with getting the updates out, but, you have to look at it from the sales & marketing side. It's not in the "best interest" of the manufacturers or carriers to spend the time to test, fix & send out updates, when people "generally" don't keep their phones for more than 2 years. With the prices of phones being in the stratosphere, maybe people will start keeping them longer. Just look after the latest iPhone announcement this past fall, how the number of people that took advantage of the cheap battery replacement went up.
Thanks.
But the other guy is poor.....
Logic of an Apple user...
Google needs to move away from the monolithic software model: It makes everyone in the software supply-chain responsible for pushing an update. By having the drivers separate and everything else as middle-ware APIs, many portions of the operating system can be replaced (via secure channels) without the approval of the brand label (Apple, Samsung) and version retailer (telecommunications corporation).
My Nokia 8 gets updates at about the same time as Pixels do (Within a week)
Wouldn't it be much more intuitive to name the different versions of Android by number instead of sweet-du-jour in the summary? How many people not in the business know by heart the order in which these randomly-assigned names came out?
I understand that the writing makes it obvious in which order they were rolled out, but were they all major versions? Subversions? Are subversions even named?
(Mind you, the full article does have version numbers next to the names)
I'm using LineageOS, a free community fork of Android. I get a system update monthly, which (I assume) includes all security updates up to that point.
It was a pain to set it up, though. Part of it was rooting my phone (a OnePlus 3T), which was not exactly straightforward. And part of it was getting connected to the usual Google services without using Google apps.
You can, I think, run Google apps directly on LineageOS, but I thought it was worth the extra effort to be completely free of them. Now I just need to swap out the services.
What all these efforts in making it easier to upgrade phones to the latest version are about it shifting the focus from Google to the manufactures.
Google has it made so easy to upgrade your phone to the latest version that it now is absolutely clear for consumers to find out who the good players are and which the bad ones are. There are no excuses anymore.
On a long enough timeline, the survival rate for everyone drops to zero.
I am not a big Android fan or even a fan of the cell-phone market, but I am a Android phone owner. As an owner of a phone, I hate when the company that is supposed to stand behind it--doesn't. We don't need to have so many stupid me-too modifications that they can't be updated. Having only one world, we can't afford to think of cellphones as being disposable.
https://www.youtube.com/c/BrendaEM
This perfectly fits the saying, "You can lead a horse to water, but you can't make it drink."
Project Treble was a long time coming, and could be argued that Google should have baked this into Android since v1.
That being said, it's here now and one would think that it should make a huge difference, but all this is really doing is putting a spotlight onto how little manufacturers care about support after their product has been purchased.
What frustrates me the most is that Google has so much sway over the ecosystem via their certification processes, etc. Why has Google not put a stipulation in their certification process that says, "To be able to access Google services, you commit to updating your devices for x time."
Why do they not do this?
Well, you can unlock your bootloader and put lineageos on your nexus 5. make sure you back everything up before starting the process
I'm struck by the fact that the best case scenario for updates, still took 4 months. 4 months! For the best case situation!
Yeah, it's progress, but maybe Google should be aiming for 1 month, or maybe 2 months. That seems more like something to brag about.
Yes, I know that Google didn't perform or publish this study. My point remains nonetheless.