Linked by Alexey Eromenko on Fri 1st Feb 2013 21:52 UTC
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And the Galaxy S2 recently got official Samsung Android 4.1.2 upgrade, which probably completes it's 2 year support cycle. I don't expect to see official 4.2 ROMs on it. Custom ROMs via manual install surely can enlong the useful life of the devices in question.
Yeah but at least the updates aren't horribly delayed. Only recently got 4.1 not 4.2....
The difference is that all firmware is made available for Nexus and so Nexus is usually very good supported with CyanogenMod but also runs eg WebOS as parallel-boot install. Such flexibiliy makes it way more actractive and hacker-friendly what leads to nice community-support far beyond Android. Its also a hacker-device and not only a consumer-device like Samsung's are.
Edited 2013-02-05 13:58 UTC




Member since:
2007-03-16
Do you think the Nexus series is supported forever ? Think again. The answer is: Nope. Two years max. And "Nexus S" (from 2010, two generations ago, before Nexus 4 and before the Galaxy Nexus) will not get official Google Android 4.2 either.
And the Galaxy S2 recently got official Samsung Android 4.1.2 upgrade, which probably completes it's 2 year support cycle. I don't expect to see official 4.2 ROMs on it. Custom ROMs via manual install surely can enlong the useful life of the devices in question.
In the real life, 3rd party web browsers (such as "Firefox for Android") may allow to use even outdated Android 2.x devices for way longer than originally intended. (due to supporting new web standards and fixing critical security issues at the browser level)
-Alexey