Jelly Bean jumped the
most in terms of
its share among Android hardware. In December, Android 4.2 and 4.1 -- both
named Jelly Bean -- were installed on 6.7% of all Android devices. They've
climbed to 10.2% in January. Android 4.1 is on 9% of Android devices, while
Android 4.2 (only available to Nexus devices right now) grabbed 1.2%. Jelly
Bean's increase can be largely attributed to device updates. For example the
Samsung Galaxy S III began to receive the update from more U.S. wireless
network operators in December. Of course, holiday shoppers helped out, too. All
the Nexus-branded
gear runs
Android 4.2. Jelly Bean 4.1 was first introduced by Google in June. It
was revised to version 4.2 in October. Six months from launch, it has finally
broken the 10% mark. Considering how quickly iOS users adopt new versions of
Apple's Smartphone platform, Google updates are distributed at a snail's pace.
Android 4.0 Ice
Cream Sandwich's presence on all Android devices climbed from 27.5% in December to 29.1% this month. A small gain, but an important
one. Android 4.0, 4.1 and 4.2 combined amount to 39.3% of all devices. The rest
of the Android OS field continues to dwindle. Gingerbread (Android 2.3) finally
slipped below the 50% mark. It dropped from 50.8% to 47.6%. Gingerbread has
long been the most-deployed version of Android. Android 2.2 Froyo runs 9% of
all Android devices, Android 2.1 Eclair powers 2.4%, and Android 1.6 Donut and
1.5 Cupcake together have just 0.2%.
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