The figure comes from Google's developer website, whose data is based on the number of devices that have accessed Google Play within a given 14-day period.
As Dwight Silverman at the Houston Chronicle points out, Google released Android 2.3 on December 6, 2010 – two years ago this week. The new data from Google, updated Monday, shows that the two-year-old Gingerbread still has wider distribution than any other version of Android.
Android 4.0, known as Ice Cream Sandwich, appears on 27.5 percent of devices, according to Google's data. Android 4.1 and 4.2, both known as Jelly Bean, appear on 5.9 percent and 0.8 percent of devices, respectively.
The problem is that phone makers and wireless carriers tend to abandon support for older Android phones before long, and even high-end Android phones are lucky to get more than one major version upgrade over their lifetimes.
Phone makers have trouble delivering upgrades for a few reasons: Differences between Google's Nexus hardware and other Android phones require extra coding; the custom user interfaces that phone makers slap onto their hardware must be integrated with any new version of Android; and the testing process required by wireless carriers requires additional time, effort and resources. As a result, older phones tend to get left behind.
Android enthusiasts may argue that average users don't know what they're missing – no harm, no foul – but that's the most tragic thing about it. A much better Android is out there, yet half of users associate the platform with an inferior experience. That can't be good for the long-term health of Google's mobile OS.
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