In the latest platform versions report from Android Developers, Honeycomb, the tablet-only version of Android has scored disappointingly, accounting for only 1.8% of all Android devices. Compare this to Apple’s 250 million iOS devices, substantially more than 1.8% of those are iPads.
The good news for Android however is that Gingerbread adoption has accelerated over the past month. In a 14-day period ending October 3rd, Gingerbread (v2.3) accounted for 38.7% of all Android devices, representing a 7.4% increase in a similar period ending September 2nd.
Between September and October Froyo (v2.2) has declined by 5.9%, now at 45.3%, as users move towards Gingerbread – Android’s latest smartphone OS version.
Platform versions Eclair (v2.1) and below have declined slightly from 16.1% in September to 14.2% in October. These are the versions that Android need to eradicate as some newer Android apps refuse to work at this level. With Android’s expected release of Ice Cream Sandwich (yes, another Android version) next week, it’s precisely these versions that may be incompatible for upgrade.
Honeycomb, the Android version reserved specifically for tablets, increased only slightly from 1.4% in September to 1.8% in October.
Until Android figures out a self-updating process similar to Apple’s iOS, fragmentation will continue to plague Android and its developers.
Five years ago, Frank Chen posed a question that has stuck with me every day…
What happens when the world's richest man gets caught in the crosshairs of one of…
As companies that operate large vehicle fleets make the switch to electric vehicles (EVs), a…
A predictive government utopia would be a dystopian nightmare for constitutional republics: perspective Predictive government…
The finternet will merge into digital public infrastructure where anonymity is abolished, money is programmable…
After more than ten years on Elance / oDesk / Upwork, I dare to say…
View Comments
too low...