Google is designing a new operating system (also at Github) based on its own new kernel (Magenta), which may be intended to unify/replace Android and ChromeOS. It is also expected to run on a wide range of ARM and x64 devices, such as Chromecast, Raspberry Pi 3, smartphones, laptops, and desktops.
(Score: 2) by bob_super on Monday August 15 2016, @10:01PM
> It costs money and time. And for what benefit to them and to their users?
My BB Priv updates about monthly. Makes me want to buy a new device from a company providing regular security updates next time, which narrows the field very quickly and benefits the people doing it.
It's like buying cars, but people do it more often. Give people a good experience and reliability, and they'll come back to you even if you don't have the best specs on paper.
(Score: 2) by urza9814 on Tuesday August 16 2016, @09:39PM
But a lot of users don't consider frequent updates to be a good experience. To the average user, if there's no update and the phone works as expected, then there's no problem. If they get infected and it starts slowing down, it's just getting old. If the company releases frequent updates, they must not know what they're doing since they couldn't get it right the first time. If the update doesn't change anything in the UI, then it was a waste of their time and bandwidth. If it DOES change something in the UI, then it's an annoyance making them relearn things.
WE know why frequent updates may be beneficial, and we understand that security is not static...but the average cellphone user doesn't always have that same understanding.