Fuchsia is a whole new start, and not Linux based. If Google wanted to flex their hardware muscle we could see any of Fuchsia's layers on any number of devices from the Home product line, future would be "chrome" books or Android devices.
I like the layers idea a lot, it means you can pick as much of the core OS as you want and then build on top of it, hopefully, circumventing the traditional fragmentation issues associated with custom Android builds.
I am not seeing how Fuchsia is an improvement in terms of the shattered ecosystem Google produces. Reading sentences like
Most[?] phone makers customize the Android user experience to differentiate themselves from the competition, instead of using Google’s default aesthetic. The ability to replace a layer further shows that Google is learning from their experience with Android. They’re making it easier for vendors to use their customizations to the UI without affecting the rest of the system. Samsung, for example, can replace stock Topaz with a TouchWiz themed version
make me sick: If phone makers are able to mix and match everything up to their pleasure, they are just going to do that. Not only comes your next phone with preinstalled crap, it is higly incompatible the rest of the "Fuchsia"-ecosystem.
Coming up next:
App developer's hell
»Your App doesn't work on the recent Fuchsia 1.32.3-HUAWEI-t-mobileEDITION«.
From a consumer's perspective are they doing unwanted marketing for iPhones. Until now, I was not willing to buy wholly into Apple's ecosystem; but dropping Android and coming up with that mixed bag will help.
They have to always be in that order. If you want to replace the app-layer you'd also have to replace the UI-layer.
Companies like Samsung want to look distinct but don't want to put in all the effort of making an app-layer. In Android they replace parts of the code with their new UI meaning at update time we have a stream.
Google engineers -> Samsung engineers -> End user
But with this new way of doing things we have 2 unrelated update streams.
Google engineers (`app-layer`) -> End users
Samsung engineers (`UI-layer`) -> End users
It might not end up being that smooth, but I'm an optimist 😉
Samsung ist going to pee as early in the stream as possible - the same goes for your phone providers in case you are buying a branded phone. You as the customer get only dirt all the way down.
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Fuchsia is a whole new start, and not Linux based. If Google wanted to flex their hardware muscle we could see any of Fuchsia's layers on any number of devices from the Home product line, future would be "chrome" books or Android devices.
I like the layers idea a lot, it means you can pick as much of the core OS as you want and then build on top of it, hopefully, circumventing the traditional fragmentation issues associated with custom Android builds.
EDIT:
I just noticed the Wikipedia article doesn't mention the layers here's 9to5google's take on it 9to5google.com/2018/03/16/fuchsia-...
I am not seeing how Fuchsia is an improvement in terms of the shattered ecosystem Google produces. Reading sentences like
make me sick: If phone makers are able to mix and match everything up to their pleasure, they are just going to do that. Not only comes your next phone with preinstalled crap, it is higly incompatible the rest of the "Fuchsia"-ecosystem.
Coming up next:
App developer's hell
»Your App doesn't work on the recent Fuchsia 1.32.3-HUAWEI-t-mobileEDITION«.
From a consumer's perspective are they doing unwanted marketing for iPhones. Until now, I was not willing to buy wholly into Apple's ecosystem; but dropping Android and coming up with that mixed bag will help.
Think of Fuchsia as a set of building blocks.
They have to always be in that order. If you want to replace the
app-layer
you'd also have to replace theUI-layer
.Companies like Samsung want to look distinct but don't want to put in all the effort of making an
app-layer
. In Android they replace parts of the code with their new UI meaning at update time we have a stream.But with this new way of doing things we have 2 unrelated update streams.
It might not end up being that smooth, but I'm an optimist 😉
You are missing my point:
Samsung ist going to pee as early in the stream as possible - the same goes for your phone providers in case you are buying a branded phone. You as the customer get only dirt all the way down.