I totally understand and agree with you. However, all the top of the line Nokia Lumias running WP7 never got WP8. I'm sure the hardware could've handled it. How do we know Google won't do something similar?
Sent from my Nexus 7 running Android Jelly Bean 4.1.2
The Xoom just got pushed 4.1.2 today thats just days after my N7 I own both my Xoom cost me less than my N7 got lucky was a best buy last one unopened closeout paid 199 and 249 for my N7 that's a lot of tablet goodness for less than 1 iPad.The previous Google tablet (Xoom) is getting Jelly Bean. 'Nuff said.
Sent from my Galaxy Nexus
Without a doubt.
Only to add what you said, it is also a point that the greatest issue Android has, which has lead to still having a lot of "Check out our app for iOS, android to come later" development, is the fragmentation. The iOs Fragmentation is so minimal it gives a good chance for developers to code on the latest iOs device and say allow it to work but say it only works iPhone 3 and up, and now tih iOS 6, iPhone 4+. The majority of people only in the last year has gotten to gingerbread and ICS finally has gotten to 25%, but with developers like Motorola (google really I know) who just dumped a bunch of phones so they didn't update them, it leaves old versions out there needing to sit for 2 years. Anything Google CAN do to minimize this, they will do until the Hardware won't let them.
I'm sure I am late but I am happy I just got the 4.1.2 update on my Nexus 7, if there's more to come, Hell Yeah!! I love the screen rotation on my home screen. Any other changes with this last update??
Sent from my Nexus 7 using Android Central Forums
I never buy a gadget expecting an update. I buy a gadget for what it does today. If it does something even better tomorrow, great. I had no idea my N7 would get OS updates--that is a nice surprise.
Android 4.1/4.2 Jelly Bean
Android 4.1 Jelly Bean on the Asus Nexus 7 tablet.
Google announced Android 4.1 (Jelly Bean) at the Google I/O conference on June 27, 2012. Based on Linux kernel 3.0.31, Jelly Bean was an incremental update with the primary aim of improving the functionality and performance of the user interface. The performance improvement involved "Project Butter", which uses touch anticipation, triple buffering, extended vsync timing and a fixed frame rate of 60 fps to create a fluid and "buttery-smooth" UI. Android 4.1 Jelly Bean was released to the Android Open Source Project on July 9, 2012, and the Nexus 7 tablet, the first device to run Jelly Bean, was released on July 13, 2012.
Google was supposed to announce Android 4.2 (Jelly Bean) at an event in New York City on October 29, 2012, but the event was cancelled due to Hurricane Sandy. The new version was announced with a press release instead of rescheduling the live event, under the slogan "A new flavor of Jelly Bean". The first devices to run Android 4.2 will be the Nexus 4 by LG and the Nexus 10 by Samsung, which will be released November 13, 2012.
Version Release date Features
4.1 July 9, 2012
Smoother user interface:
Vsync timing across all drawing and animation done by the Android framework, including application rendering, touch events, screen composition and display refresh
Triple buffering in the graphics pipeline
Enhanced accessibility
Bi-directional text and other language support
User-installable keyboard maps
Expandable notifications
Ability to turn off notifications on an app specific basis
Shortcuts and widgets can automatically be re-arranged or re-sized to allow new items to fit on home screens
Bluetooth data transfer for Android Beam
Offline voice dictation
New interface layout for tablets with smaller screens or phablets (whose screens more closely resemble that of a phone)
Improved voice search
Improved camera app
Google Wallet (for the Nexus 7)
High-resolution Google+ contact photos
Google Now search application
Multichannel audio
USB audio (for external sound DACs)
Audio chaining (also known as gapless playback)
Stock Android browser is replaced with the Android mobile version of Google Chrome in devices with Android 4.1 preinstalled[78]
Ability for other launchers to add widgets from the app drawer without requiring root access
4.1.1 July 23, 2012
Fixed a Bug on the Nexus 7 regarding the non-ability to change screen orientation.
4.1.2 October 9, 2012
Lock/home screen rotation support for the Nexus 7
One-finger gestures to expand/collapse notifications
Bug fixes and performance enhancements
4.2 October 29, 2012
Photo Sphere panorama photos
Keyboard with gesture typing
Lockscreen improvements, including widget support and the ability to swipe directly to camera
Notification power controls
"Daydream" screensaver, shows information when idle or docked
Multiple user accounts (tablets only)
Support for wireless display (Miracast)
Accessibility improvements: triple-tap to magnify the entire screen, pan and zoom with two fingers. Speech output and Gesture Mode navigation for blind users.
New clock app with built-in world clock, stop watch and timer
I bought a refurbished HTC Flyer in February, hardware was powerful enough but little development and being cut off at honeycomb is the biggest reason I am a nexus 7 owner now. Nexus devices are easy to develop for and they get updates first and no manufacturer skins. I got the nexus 7 because of software not hardware. The way I see it, phones are disposable pleasures you almost can't blame manufacturers for not supporting them when people are all about upgrading as soon as they can but I bought the flyer with intentions of keeping it a while and I really feel like I got burnt on it.
Sent from my HTC PH39100 using Tapatalk 2
A couple of people have posted about buying the 32GB in stores but I don't think they came with 4.2 installed.Has anyone gotten the 4.2 update on their N7 yet? I'm wondering when that will come out. Or do you know if it is already live on the 32GB N7?
Has anyone gotten the 4.2 update on their N7 yet? I'm wondering when that will come out. Or do you know if it is already live on the 32GB N7?
Has anyone gotten the 4.2 update on their N7 yet? I'm wondering when that will come out. Or do you know if it is already live on the 32GB N7?
Its not live yet.. The code hasn't even been pushed to AOSP
Our OTAs will likely start rolling out around when devices start shipping with 4.2 (i.e. The Nexus 10 and 4). This might still be a while.. I don't believe a date has been confirmed yet.
Sent from my Galaxy Nexus using Tapatalk 2
Has anyone gotten the 4.2 update on their N7 yet? I'm wondering when that will come out. Or do you know if it is already live on the 32GB N7?
I never buy a gadget expecting an update. I buy a gadget for what it does today. If it does something even better tomorrow, great. I had no idea my N7 would get OS updates--that is a nice surprise.
I totally understand and agree with you. However, all the top of the line Nokia Lumias running WP7 never got WP8. I'm sure the hardware could've handled it. How do we know Google won't do something similar?
Sent from my Nexus 7 running Android Jelly Bean 4.1.2