Stories
Slash Boxes
Comments

SoylentNews is people

SoylentNews is powered by your submissions, so send in your scoop. Only 17 submissions in the queue.

Submission Preview

Link to Story

RIP OG Pixel: Google Ends Support After Just Three Years [Update]

Accepted submission by upstart at 2019-11-06 17:33:56
/dev/random

████ Bot sub. Needs editing. Et cetera. ████

Submitted via IRC for soylent_red

RIP OG Pixel: Google ends support after just three years [Update] [arstechnica.com]

Update: The Google Pixel is scheduled [google.com] to have its support ended this month, but Google told The Verge [theverge.com] the OG Pixel will actually get one last update in December, which will “encapsulates a variety of updates” from November and December. After that, it's time for retirement.

Original Story: Pour one out this morning for the OG Google Pixel 1. This month's Android security patches are out [android.com], and while you'll find bulletins covering the Pixel 2, 3, and 4, the original Google Pixel didn't make the cut. Google is ending support this month.

The Pixel 1 launched in 2016 [arstechnica.com] with a promised two years of major update support and three years of security updates. It was Google's first self-branded smartphone, ending the cheap, value-oriented Nexus line and ushering in an era of expensive—probably too-expensive—Google phones. Major OS support was eventually extended to three years, which is now standard across the Pixel line, and the original device was updated to Android 10 [arstechnica.com] in September.

Three years of support is pretty weak compared to the manufacturer Google has most modeled the Pixel line after: Apple. iPhones typically get five years [statista.com] of major OS updates, which Apple can do partly thanks to its end-to-end control over the hardware and software. Google, if it even wanted to support the Pixel line for that long, would need to drag along Qualcomm and other chip partners to make it work. The longer update support is a major reason why iPhones hold their value [businessinsider.com] much better than Pixel phones in the phone resale market, even if you go by Google's own trade-in program [9to5google.com].

Google has surprised us before [arstechnica.com] with longer-than-expected device support, but it looks like the Pixel 1 will get no such benefits. The end of the Pixel 1 update timeline heralds the beginning of the Pixel 4 update timeline, which recently launched [arstechnica.com] and is now getting its first security update.

← Previous story [arstechnica.com]Next story → [arstechnica.com]


Original Submission