http://theunderstatement.com/post/11982112928/android-orphans-visualizing-a-sad-history-of-support

the understatement: Android Orphans: Visualizing a Sad History of Support

The announcement that Nexus One users won’t be getting upgraded to Android 4.0 
Ice Cream Sandwich led some to justifiably question Google’s support of their 
devices. I look at it a little differently: Nexus One owners are lucky. I’ve 
been researching the history of OS updates on Android phones and Nexus One 
users have fared much, much better than most Android buyers.

I went back and found every Android phone shipped in the United States up 
through the middle of last year. I then tracked down every update that was 
released for each device - be it a major OS upgrade or a minor support patch - 
as well as prices and release & discontinuation dates. I compared these dates & 
versions to the currently shipping version of Android at the time. The 
resulting picture isn’t pretty - well, not for Android users:



Other than the original G1 and MyTouch, virtually all of the millions of phones 
represented by this chart are still under contract today. If you thought that 
entitled you to some support, think again:

7 of the 18 Android phones never ran a current version of the OS.
12 of 18 only ran a current version of the OS for a matter of weeks or less.
10 of 18 were at least two major versions behind well within their two year 
contract period.
11 of 18 stopped getting any support updates less than a year after release.
13 of 18 stopped getting any support updates before they even stopped selling 
the device or very shortly thereafter.
15 of 18 don’t run Gingerbread, which shipped in December 2010.
In a few weeks, when Ice Cream Sandwich comes out, every device on here will be 
another major version behind.
At least 16 of 18 will almost certainly never get Ice Cream Sandwich.
Also worth noting that each bar in the chart starts from the first day of 
release - so it only gets worse for people who bought their phone late in its 
sales period.

Why Is This So Bad?

This may be stating the obvious but there are at least three major reasons.

Consumers Get Screwed

Ever since the iPhone turned every smartphone into a blank slate, the value of 
a phone is largely derived from the software it can run and how well the phone 
can run it. When you’re making a 2 year commitment to a device, it’d be nice to 
have some way to tell if the software was going to be remotely current in a 
year or, heck, even a month. Turns out that’s nearly impossible - here are two 
examples:

The Samsung Behold II on T-Mobile was the most expensive Android phone ever and 
Samsung promoted that it would get a major update to Eclair at least. But at 
launch the phone was already two major versions behind — and then Samsung 
decided not to do the update after all, and it fell three major OS versions 
behind. Every one ever sold is still under contract today.

The Motorola Devour on Verizon launched with a Megan Fox Super Bowl ad, while 
reviews said it was “built to last and it delivers on features.” As it turned 
out, the Devour shipped with an OS that was already outdated. Before the next 
Super Bowl came around, it was three major versions behind. Every one ever sold 
is still under contract until sometime next year.

Developers Are Constrained

Besides the obvious platform fragmentation problems, consider this comparison: 
iOS developers, like Instapaper’s Marco Arment, waited patiently until just 
this month to raise their apps’ minimum requirement to the 11 month old iOS 
4.2.1. They can do so knowing that it’s been well over 3 years since anyone 
bought an iPhone that couldn’t run that OS. If developers apply that same 
standard to Android, it will be at least 2015 before they can start requiring 
2010’s Gingerbread OS. That’s because every US carrier is still selling - even 
just now introducing - smartphones that will almost certainly never run 
Gingerbread and beyond. Further, those are phones still selling for actual 
upfront money - I’m not even counting the generally even more outdated & 
presumably much more popular free phones.

It seems this is one area the Android/Windows comparison holds up: most app 
developers will end up targeting an ancient version of the OS in order to 
maximize market reach.

Security Risks Loom

In the chart, the dashed line in the middle of each bar indicates how long that 
phone was getting any kind of support updates - not just major OS upgrades. The 
significant majority of models have received very limited support after sales 
were discontinued. If a security or privacy problem popped up in old versions 
of Android or its associated apps (i.e. the browser), it’s hard to imagine that 
all of these no-longer-supported phones would be updated. This is only less 
likely as the number of phones that manufacturers would have to go back and 
deal with increases: Motorola, Samsung, and HTC all have at least 20 models 
each in the field already, each with a range of carriers that seemingly have to 
be dealt with individually.

Why Don’t Android Phones Get Updated?

That’s a very good question. Obviously a big part of the problem is that 
Android has to go from Google to the phone manufacturers to the carriers to the 
devices, whereas iOS just goes from Apple directly to devices. The hacker 
community (e.g. CyanogenMod, et cetera) has frequently managed to get these 
phones to run the newer operating systems, so it isn’t a hardware issue.

It appears to be a widely held viewpoint that there’s no incentive for 
smartphone manufacturers to update the OS: because manufacturers don’t make any 
money after the hardware sale, they want you to buy another phone as soon as 
possible. If that’s really the case, the phone manufacturers are spectacularly 
dumb: ignoring the 2 year contract cycle & abandoning your users isn’t going to 
engender much loyalty when they do buy a new phone. Further, it’s been fairly 
well established that Apple also really only makes money from hardware sales, 
and yet their long term update support is excellent (see chart).

In other words, Apple’s way of getting you to buy a new phone is to make you 
really happy with your current one, whereas apparently Android phone makers 
think they can get you to buy a new phone by making you really unhappy with 
your current one. Then again, all of this may be ascribing motives and intent 
where none exist - it’s entirely possible that the root cause of the problem is 
just flat-out bad management (and/or the aforementioned spectacular dumbness).

A Price Observation

All of the even slightly cheaper phones are much worse than the iPhone when it 
comes to OS support, but it’s interesting to note that most of the phones on 
this list were actually not cheaper than the iPhone when they were released. 
Unlike the iPhone however, the “full-priced” phones are frequently discounted 
in subsequent months. So the “low cost” phones that fueled Android’s generally 
accepted price advantage in this period were basically either (a) cheaper from 
the outset, and ergo likely outdated & terribly supported or (b) purchased 
later in the phone’s lifecycle, and ergo likely outdated & terribly supported.

Also, at any price point you’d better love your rebates. If you’re financially 
constrained enough to be driven by upfront price, you can’t be that excited 
about plunking down another $100 cash and waiting weeks or more to get it back. 
And sometimes all you’re getting back is a “$100 Promotion Card” for your 
chosen provider. Needless to say, the iPhone has never had a rebate.

Along similar lines, a very small but perhaps telling point: the price of every 
single Android phone I looked at ended with 99 cents - something Apple has 
never done (the iPhone is $199, not $199.99). It’s almost like a warning sign: 
you’re buying a platform that will nickel-and-dime you with ads and undeletable 
bloatware, and it starts with those 99 cents. And that damn rebate form they’re 
hoping you don’t send in.

Notes on the chart and data

Why stop at June 2010?

I’m not going to. I do think that having 15 months or so of history gives a 
good perspective on how a phone has been treated, but it’s also just a labor 
issue - it takes a while to dredge through the various sites to determine the 
history of each device. I plan to continue on and might also try to publish the 
underlying table with references. I also acknowledge that it’s possible I’ve 
missed something along the way.

Android Release Dates

For the major Android version release dates, I used the date at which it was 
actually available on a normal phone you could get via normal means. I did not 
use the earlier SDK release date, nor the date at which ROMs, hacks, source, et 
cetera were available.

Outside the US

Finally, it’s worth noting that people outside the US have often had it even 
worse. For example, the Nexus One didn’t go on sale in Europe until 5 months 
after the US, the Droid/Milestone FroYo update happened over 7 months later 
there, and the Cliq never got updated at all outside of the US.





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