In an interesting mobile development, Linux.com reports that four new phones are shipping with cyanogen as their base.
After many delays, all four major mobile Linux alternatives to Android have finally arrived on smartphones. Mozilla's Firefox OS was first out of the gate two years ago, followed by Jolla's Sailfish OS, and this year they were joined by the first Ubuntu and Tizen phones. Yet, a fifth open source mobile Linux platform may have already eclipsed them all. The CyanogenMod flavor of Android is rapidly expanding from its role as the most popular alternative mobile phone mod for flashing onto Android phones to being a much sought after pre-installed OS.
This week, a UK-based company called Wileyfox joined a growing number of third-party vendors to tap the commercial Cyanogen OS 12.1 version of the fully open source CyanogenMod with its new Swift and Storm phones. Meanwhile, a Lenovo-backed Chinese startup called ZUK announced plans to ship an international version of its ZUK Z1 phone equipped with the same 12.1 Cyanogen build starting in September. CyanogenMod 12.1 is based on the latest Android 5.1.1 Lollipop platform.
(Score: 2) by Hyperturtle on Monday August 31 2015, @08:48PM
I'm not sure it makes it much different than the primary alternatives that are within reach of users and typical mainstream adoption. It just can't be as trusted as it used to be--much like the others that already are in use, like the original OS it was supposed to free users from.
What are you trying to point out...?
No offense, but if you are you and logged in anonymously like how you say you sometimes do... your pseudonym depicting oneself as someone that associates themselves with Google and then proceeding to point out that MS is corrupting Android in some way that violates the spirit of what we all wanted out of Android... seems like the pot over-boiling and pouring some of its contents into the kettle while calling it black.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday September 01 2015, @12:07AM
if you are you
Who else here points to TechRights?
and logged in
I don't think you understand the term.
anonymously like how you say you sometimes do
I never said that.
Your imagination is working overtime.
What I have said is that I have no interest in cookies or signups or karma.
(I always start at zero and each of my posts stands or falls on its own merits.)
I have also mentioned that there is an account (which no one has ever used) that a mean-spirited someone got into his pointy little head to establish [soylentnews.org] using the 5-character string I append to my posts.
your pseudonym depicting oneself as someone that associates themselves[1] with Google
Again, your imagination is working overtime.
My nym was given to me when I was a child, decades before the Internet was a thing.
It's a phonetic form of part of my name.
[1] The correct word would be "himself"; you need to learn how to match your nouns and verbs better.
what we all wanted out of Android
I am certain that you don't speak for all.
-- gewg_