as informed in Google going to force Android smartphone industrialists to commit to regular security updates, the company announce on Friday. As Google I/O comes to a close, the Android developer told it plans making the every 30 days updates a requirement as fraction of its agreement with OEMs. Related: Google I/O 2018 highlightsThe announcement is quite timely too. There's no extra specifics on the updated Android partner agreement just yet, however we might see it as the Android P launch approaches this autumn. Probably for marketing reasons, they just set the patch standerd to nearly an arbitrary date, whatever looks best."What was your Google I/O highlight?
The Galaxy S9 and other non-Pixel phones might get Android P sooner than you think
At I/O 2018, Google surprised Android fans with making the premier public beta of Android P obtainable to seven non-Pixel phones. The Galaxy S9 isn't 1 of the hot Android devices of the premier half of the year which going to run Android P betas right now, however Samsung's flagship smartphone might get the last Android P build a lot faster than you might expect. Considering 22% of Android devices currently run a version of Android which was launch four years ago, 25.5% run Android Marshmallow from 2015, and 31% run Nougat from 2016. The Galaxy S9 may be 1 of these devices, although Samsung is yet to detect any Android P plans. Hopefully, plenty of 2018 flagships going to get Android P with the finish of the year.
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