Google has traditionally been good about releasing OS updates in a timely fashion. Android KitKat was announced this morning alongside the Nexus 5. Google has already updated the Android SDK with 4.4 ...
While we’ve all been thinking that the next version of Android was going to be called Key Lime Pie, Google has come out and ruined the surprise for us and told us all otherwise. Over at their Google+ ...
Google appears to be getting serious about putting the whole modern device lineup on their newest Android 4.4 KitKat operating system software update here just days after the system was revealed in ...
Google's own senior vice president for Android, Chrome and Google Apps has shed some light on the upcoming new version of the Android OS, the Android 4.4 KitKat. While Android has surpassed 1 billion ...
Still, fragmentation remains a thorn in the side of Android, especially compared with the relative ease of Apple's iOS updates. Lance Whitney is a freelance technology writer and trainer and a former ...
Motorola on Thursday announced it has started rolling out the latest version of Android, 4.4 KitKat, to the Moto G ahead of schedule. I'm PCMag's managing editor for consumer electronics, overseeing ...
The uptick comes after Samsung and LG started rolling out KitKat to some of their most popular devices. I'm PCMag's managing editor for consumer electronics, overseeing an experienced team of analysts ...
The next version of Android will be called KitKat, as in the Nestle chocolate wafers, and comes with a contest to win Android and Google Play swag. Senior writer Seth Rosenblatt covered Google and ...
Android KitKat has been around for many years. Notably, as Android Police reported, it first became available in 2013 when Google released it for select devices. For 10 years now, the search engine ...
A lthough Android still receives major updates every year, they’re nowhere near as transformative as those from the early ...
The next version of Android will be called Android KitKat. When I read the initial headlines blasting through my Twitter feed, I said to myself, “I wonder how Nestle feels about this.” Clicking over ...