I usually avoid Recommending Google Products (And Apple Too) for business use. Because Google doesn't like playing the Legacy Support game, and when a project get dull or just isn't popular enough Google like to Drop the idea, or just let it linger.
I am not saying Google is planning to Drop Android, but I feel Google may be internally struggling to get its Android Development Teams prepped for the Long Haul Development methodology. Where coding can no longer break compatibility unless properly documented an
I feel like Google is under zero management. There is almost no hype or advertising of any new products. If there is it is over by the time they release the advert. They constantly are removing products people are happily using and trying to replace them with half baked limited options that they released within the past 3 years and haven't even promoted well enough for anyone to know they exist or improved their feature set to even outdo their "old" stuff. It feels like they have zero compass for where they
Personally, I think that someone on the Android development team finally realized that sharing these statistics wasn't necessarily good for PR. So really, if they're doing anything at all, they're most likely trying to find a way to "fix" the statistics themselves, rather than the website which delivers those statistics. After all, geeky publications often comment about the frustratingly long amount of time it takes to get Android security updates through the various carriers... but the more important take-
Yes, but Android is a core part of its business, Google usually drops less then successful products, But Android has been giving Apple its bruising for a while.
I usually avoid Recommending Google Products (And Apple Too) for business use. Because Google doesn't like playing the Legacy Support game, and when a project get dull or just isn't popular enough Google like to Drop the idea, or just let it linger.
I am not saying Google is planning to Drop Android, but I feel Google may be internally struggling to get its Android Development Teams prepped for the Long Haul Development methodology. Where coding can no longer break compatibility unless properly documented an
Personally, I think that someone on the Android development team finally realized that sharing these statistics wasn't necessarily good for PR. So really, if they're doing anything at all, they're most likely trying to find a way to "fix" the statistics themselves, rather than the website which delivers those statistics. After all, geeky publications often comment about the frustratingly long amount of time it takes to get Android security updates through the various carriers... but the more important take-
Yes, but Android is a core part of its business, Google usually drops less then successful products, But Android has been giving Apple its bruising for a while.