Hacker News new | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit login

One of the affected models, the Thunderbolt, only now started getting updates to Gingerbread this week. That is, until Verizon halted it due to a major usability bug that should have been identified easily in carrier testing (voicemail notifications don't work).

Given that it took it took HTC this long to get an update to an Android version that's been available in source since December and they still managed to mess it up, I don't have high hopes for something like this getting fixed.




Surely the blame there is on Verizon. My aging, carrier-free HTC Nexus One gets regular updates.


There are only two ways I recommend Android - use a Google-branded phone that Google will provide complete OS support for, or go it alone with OS updates from a 3rd party.

For non-geeks the first option is the only viable one, IMHO.

You've obviously settled on the same conclusion.


Could you point me in the right direction for 3rd party?


I guess zdw is referring to Cyanogenmod. There might be others, I don't know.


On my (contractless) Galaxy S2 - OTA updates happen never, I have to connect to a Windows box for updates.

Do you know how OTA updates are pushed out for the non-Google Android phones that are bought without a contract?


How well they manage android version bumps has nothing to do with security updates.




Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: