what version is everyone one?
mine reads:
Wear OS by Google: 1.5
Home App: 2.15.0.206732242
Google Play Services: 12.8.74
Android OS: 8.0
Security Level: March 1, 2018
Model: LEO-BX9
System Updates reads that it is up to date.
my understanding is that this watch should be on Wear OS 2.0+. the OS appears to be 2.0+.
it's working quite well.... maybe the Home App is really the Wear OS?
thanks!
Everything same as yours besides watch model. Mine also says it's up to date.
Model: LEO-DLXX
Wear OS by Google: 1.5
Home App: 2.15.0.206732242
Google Play Services: 12.8.74
Android OS: 8.0
Security Level: March 1, 2018
Google Wear 2.0 was rebranded to Wear OS 1.0 in May or June.
It's so simple name change and version too. Google like always made name and version chaos.
Related
Hi,
I'm just curious..there is this pie chart at developer.android.com site, which shows the distribution of android OS...
Does anyone of you know a chart, that is not (only) based on the android OS version but also on the device?
For instance, let's say from these 8.1% that accessed the market with OS 2.3.3-.2.3.4 are 5 % from Galaxy S
I'm not aware of this - but as a developer, there are charts that give you the device name that have downloaded your app.
Google released the numbers on September 4th, and it looks like more and more devices are now running Android 4.0 or above.
Jelly Bean accounts for 45% of Android Devices. Combined with Ice Cream Sandwich, the total for Android 4.0+ is 67% of all Android devices.
Fragmentation my ass. Check out the source for the breakdown.
Source
Google CEO Sundar Pichai said that the company may launch an online poll to give the public a chance to decide the name of the next Android version, which will be Android 7.0.
All the versions of Google’s Android mobile operating system thus far have candy-themed names. We’ve seen Donut (Android 1.6), Eclair (2.0), Froyo (2.2), Gingerbread (2.3), Honeycomb (3.0), Ice Cream Sandwich (4.0), Jelly Bean (4.1), KitKat (4.4), Lollipop (5.0), and this year’s release was Marshmallow (6.0).
With Google having decided that the new Android 7.0 build will be called Android N, Pichai’s hints about the company’s new Android naming plan indicates that Android fans and users may get an opportunity to submit their choices for a candy-themed name beginning with the letter N. Android N is likely to come sometime in October next year.
Android N 7.0 Concept - Features
Hello,
I have two phones, both non-rooted, stock roms:
Source Phone:
Model: Xiaomi Redmi Note 4X 64 (Global Dual SIM TD-LTE 32GB 2016102)
Software: MIUI Global 11.0.2, Android 7.0
Target Phone:
Model: Samsung Galaxy A20 (SM-A505FN/DS).
Software: One UI 3.1, Android 11
I want to migrate all the apps from the Source to Target. Ideally with settings/appdata (but that's not a must have). Both phones use Google Play and F-Droid. I'd like to avoid using public cloud sync services although I have a self-hosted Nextcloud instance for transferring files, if needed be. What would be the recommended way to move all those apps from Source to Target?
I have two devices and both of them are running on Android 13 (OneUI 5.0 and Oxygen OS 13). Both of them have the 'latest' Google Play Services update dated 07 December 2022.
However, the version numbers are different (despite the same date of update).
If I check apkmirror, there are several variants of the same version, and the difference lies in the version code. I guess that the version code depends on the architecture, Android version, device DPI, etc.
But why is there a different version number for different devices that all seem to have received the latest update on the same day?
You should have asked Google this question.