Article refrains from drawing conclusions, instead presenting the data. Android is doing better at moving users to newer versions, but the overwhelming majority of users don’t have the current Android OS version nor the previous version, combined.
Article refrains from drawing conclusions, instead presenting the data. Android is doing better at moving users to newer versions, but the overwhelming majority of users don’t have the current Android OS version nor the previous version, combined.
Software support is expensive. If you can’t afford a €400-€500 phone, you’ll end up with the models where every cost cutting measure is applied. Nobody is paying for seven years of support on a phone that’s normally sold for €100 because they can’t afford anything better.
Samsung is doing five years of support (four Android version updates) for a phone released for €300 half a year ago. If you buy a Samsung Galaxy A25 5G for about €190 now, you’ll still get almost 4½ of upstream support and three Android version upgrades. I don’t think expecting more than that is reasonable.
Xiaomi is doing four years of support on a phone released for €240. I think the price/support for Xiaomi scales quite well compared to Samsung, so Chinese phones aren’t universally bad either. However, Xiaomi’s OS is shit so I wouldn’t want to be stuck with that for four years.
If you go even cheaper than that, you get HMD(“Nokia”)'s 2 upgrades/3 years of security updates program. Not much, but you can’t expect much for a phone retailing at €140. I’m surprised they can even cover the cost of materials on those things, let alone OS development.
My biggest gripe is the lack of security updates, to be honest. They’re a lot less work to implement, and most patches come straight from Google. Even mid range phones should at least get those as long as they’re available. It’s not like there’s a kernel upgrade necessary to patch a bug in the Android Java internals. I can live with not getting Android 15, but at least patch the damn Android framework bugs! The exception to that is, of course, driver support from companies like Qualcomm, who do offer maintenance contracts, but usually at a price that cost-cutting brands aren’t willing to invest in, because that keeps prices nice and low.
I think we’ve been spoiled by getting Windows for free for so long. It makes sense for macOS software to be free if you look at those prices, but after Microsoft abused their market dominance to force Windows everywhere (rather than having the consumer buy Windows for €100), people just expect software to be maintained for free. If you’re not willing to spend money on the software, you’ll need to pay that money upfront by buying a device with a support lifetime that matches your expectations.
(for American readers: prices mentioned include 21% VAT)
I wasn’t spoiled by Windows. I was spoiled by Android’s relative, Linux. :p
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I was positively surprised to see that nix mobile distros(if one could call that) were easily swappable. Something as simple as putting in a different image on microSD card and flashing it. But there were so many issues from screen issues to unoptimized apps to even call quality problems. It has a long way to go.