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Services & Software Android 4.4 KitKat bites off 13% of Android devices Still, fragmentation remains a thorn in the side of Android, especially compared with the relative ease of Apple's iOS updates.
Instead of rolling the review of the Nexus 5 and KitKat all into one review, we decided to do a review on the Nexus 5 and a separate one on Android 4.4 – KitKat. So here’s our KitKat review.
Android version 4.4 KitKat is now officially dead, as it lost support for Google Play Services. Takes place in August.
Android 4.4 KitKat brings a little OS equality The latest version of Android is designed to work on both low- and high-end phones, which will hopefully end OS fragmentation.
Android, the world's most popular OS for embedded and mobile application running the most complete version, KitKat 4.4.4, is now customizable, reliable and easy to use, matching perfectly customers' ...
It seems like yesterday to many of us, but Android 4.4 KitKat was launched in 2013, a whopping 10 years ago by this point. In a way, over the course of a few years, it became Android's Windows XP ...
As predicted, Google not only revealed its new Nexus 5 device this evening (October 31) but also its latest Android offering, 4.4 KitKat. The new handset goes on sale from tomorrow (November 1 ...
Google announced Play Services is dropping support for Android 4.4 KitKat, which is now 10 years old. Support isn't really being artificially cut off, either.
In a quick post, Google announced that it is no longer supporting Android KitKat in future releases of Google Play services.
But hackers have been running Android, Ubuntu, and other operating systems on the tablet for almost as long as it’s been around. Now the first builds of Android 4.4 KitKat are available.
Key Lime Pie is dead. Long live the KitKat! Commentators have been referring to the next version of Android as Key Lime Pie for well over a year now, but in a surprise move, Google has announced ...