• @Eheran
    link
    English
    153 months ago

    Older phones get updates?

    • @TheFeatureCreature
      link
      English
      103 months ago

      The primary reason I moved to iPhones was because I got absolutely sick and tired of my android phones being abandoned by the manufacturer after a year. I’m sure it is better these days, but those earlier days of extremely slow Carrier-based updates completely ruined my trust and I know I’m not the only one.

      • Lippy
        link
        fedilink
        83 months ago

        Yeah it was pretty terrible until recently. It at least seems to be changing now. The Pixel 8 line and up now get 7 years of support, and Samsung followed shortly afterwards by doing the same with the S24 series (but not their lower end devices). There’s still plenty of other Android devices that get barely any support though, so it’s getting there, slowly.

        • @lepinkainen
          link
          English
          113 months ago

          Correction: Google and Samsung have said they’ll do that. Time will tell if they actually stick to their promises.

          Apple on the other hand has already done so for over a decade with no fanfare or promises.

          • @[email protected]
            link
            fedilink
            English
            33 months ago

            Yeah, I won’t trust Google on that unless they actually deliver. Too many canned projects by that company.

            The iPhone 6S got iOS 9 to iOS 15, so 7 years of mainline software support and as of now it’s still getting security updates - 9 years later (latest version as of now is 15.8.3 released end of July this year). The iPhone XS entered year 7 of mainline software support with iOS 18.

            Sure, some phones only got 6 years of mainline software support, namely the iPhone 7 or iPhone X. They’re all still receiving security updates though.

            Google just now promised to more or less match that starting with the Pixel 8 series, but they didn’t retroactively apply that policy to their previous devices. The Pixel 8 now has just shy of 6 years of mainline software support to go to fulfill Google’s promise and we’ll see how long they’ll release security updates after that.

    • babybus
      link
      fedilink
      English
      2
      edit-2
      3 months ago

      It depends on what you count as an old phone. It’s Galaxy S10 in this case, it’ll probably stop receiving updates soon.

      • Lippy
        link
        fedilink
        43 months ago

        The S10 stopped receiving Android security updates in March 2022. The issue here is with an issue with a SmartThings app update on Android 12. Not sure if there’s any Samsung devices that both run that version of Android and are still supported, and that’s likely why the issue wasn’t caught.

        I suppose with an issue this serious, they’re probably compelled to fix it regardless of whether or not the affected devices are still supported.