Amazon has been working on an in-house replacement for its Android-based Fire OS, codenamed "Vega" and built for easier app development, according to reporting from Janko Roettgers at Lowpass.
Based on job listings, multiple sources, forum posts, and unguarded LinkedIn boasts, Roettgers writes that Amazon has been working on Vega since at least 2019, is mostly done with the core development, and is now focused on an SDK and developer outreach. Vega would replace the Fire OS that is installed on Fire TV sticks and televisions, Kindle Fire tablets, and other Amazon devices. Vega, based on "a flavor of Linux," uses the popular JavaScript-based React Native as an application framework. This could simplify development for Fire devices alongside other React-ready platforms, including smartphones, desktops, and other smart TVs.
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While an Android base provides a relatively familiar entry for developers that already have Android apps, rebuilding the AOSP project—meant to support a wealth of different devices and carrying years of technical debt—seemingly became frustrating enough for Amazon to push toward an in-house solution.
(Score: 5, Touché) by Rosco P. Coltrane on Wednesday November 15 2023, @06:47AM (2 children)
I've pivoted away from Amazon gear a long time ago myself.
For me, Amazon usually means:
- Ultra-cheap Amazon in-house brands: cheap Chinese knockoffs of good product from good third-party sellers whose business Amazon want to steal - avoid
- "Serious" Amazon-branded stuff: spyware - avoid
- Randomly-generated brand names: cheap Chinese shit - avoid
- Anything else worth buying makes Bezos richer and feeds the wage-slavery machine at the fulfillment center and in delivery trucks - avoid
TL;DR: Amazon: avoid
(Score: 5, Funny) by VLM on Wednesday November 15 2023, @01:12PM
Just buy it from AliExpress directly like they do. They're not offering much of a service when they sell knockoffs for 80% of retail, when you can order the same thing from aliexpress for 20% of retail.
I'm thinking mostly of dev board knockoffs and breakout boards. You can pay someone on amazon $25 to order it from Adafruit and get it next week, or directly pay Adafruit $20 and get it next week, or pay someone on Amazon to order a knockoff from Aliexpress for $18 and get it in a couple days, or pay Aliexpress $4 and get it in a couple weeks worst case.
Generally I choose the latter.
The problem with Amazon is if you pay $25 its worse than ebay where you no longer tell if what you'll get is new or used or 'real' or gray market or total knockoff or fake -n- broken. You're more likely to get what you thought you ordered if you buy from Adafruit or Aliexpress.
(Score: 1) by Runaway1956 on Wednesday November 15 2023, @02:55PM
I'll second that, Rosco. As a Vine reviewer, I see an awful lot of those randomly generated brand names. I don't remember the exact details, but I was offered some children's toy, with a brand name that began with "lethal". My immediate thought was "hmmm, lethal children's toys, what could possibly go wrong?" And, cheap Chinese knockoffs. I write some horrible reviews of those things. Of course, I have to restrain myself to conform to Amazon's silly rules.
Unfortunately, Amazon's position as a leading retailer is pretty secure. I don't see how they can possibly be dislodged any time soon. We can only hope that they start making the mistakes that demoted Sears from a leading retailer to obscurity.
“I have become friends with many school shooters” - Tampon Tim Walz