Google Begins Rolling Out Android 11 (venturebeat.com) 32
Google today launched Android 11, the latest version of its mobile OS, and pushed the source code to the Android Open Source Project (AOSP). From a report: Unlike previous major versions, Android 11 is not only arriving as an over-the-air update to Pixel phones first, but also on OnePlus, Xiaomi, Oppo, and Realme phones "with more partners launching and upgrading devices over the coming months." That's a major departure for Android, updates for which take months to arrive thanks to carriers and device makers dragging their feet. It doesn't help that Android is the dominant mobile operating system available on thousands of different device configurations, powering over 2.5 billion monthly active devices. [...] Android 11 brings a long list of new features. Google originally split them into three themes: People, Controls, and Privacy. But there is also support for 5G, new screen types, and call screening. There's even a frame rate API for helping apps and games adopt variable refresh rates, which will be a big focus over the next few years as phones and TVs adopt the feature from computer monitors. Google also expanded the Neural Networks API for running computationally intensive machine learning operations.
Wha'ts wrong with Honda? (Score:4, Interesting)
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Incidentally that's the last version of Android I got excited for. Didn't that introduce multi-touch? Everything since has been minor tweaks and pointless features.
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Android 5/Lollipop brought the Materi
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You can't side load apps without hacking. There are no security issues, no browser, no reason to upgrade. Updating would do nothing except perhaps break some of the Honda apps.
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Huh, seems the older models had a browser. From MY2018 they stopped including one.
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You're assuming they don't support Bluetooth at all, and any wireless method of upgrading the nav system's maps, remote door locks, remote starting, etc.
Bluetooth is generally a pretty big attack surface, and the vulnerabilities in relatively ancient implementations like Android 4 are going to be well-known.
You may not be able to hack it from the Internet at large (but that's coming too, lots of "use your car as a mobile hotspot!"), but Bluetooth range is somehow both shorter and longer than you want it to
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Looking for some fun to get into? ()
If you're going to try and spam nerd can you at least make sure you format function calls correctly? Hanging parens are such a turn-off, though maybe you can still attract some Lisp programmers.
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Shockingly, it's likely because Android 4 is the latest Android OS running on the Automotive SoC that it's using.
There aren't that many automotive SoCs out there - a few models from Freescale and a couple from Qualcomm (which run Android 9 or so I believe).
Given these SoCs are fairly dated already (they're automotive because the SoC vendor will keep them in production for at least a decade), it's likely Honda first started using it years
Can you lie to apps yet ? (Score:2)
Some I trust more than others, many not at all - I do not want most of them to have access to my contacts. Many refuse to work unless I give permissions that I won't give. So it would be really good if for app X I could allow it access to a different contact list that had, maybe, details of my best mates: Donald Duck,Trump & Biden. My real friends few apps would have access to.
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There's an app for that!
(It only needs access to everything on the device)
Note: This is a joke that may or may not actually be true; I have no idea.
Re:Can you lie to apps yet ? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Can you lie to apps yet ? (Score:4, Interesting)
Some I trust more than others, many not at all - I do not want most of them to have access to my contacts. Many refuse to work unless I give permissions that I won't give. So it would be really good if for app X I could allow it access to a different contact list that had, maybe, details of my best mates: Donald Duck,Trump & Biden. My real friends few apps would have access to.
You're looking for one of these:
https://github.com/M66B/XPriva... [github.com]
http://www.android.protectmypr... [protectmyprivacy.org]
Both of which require the Xposed Framework
https://github.com/ElderDriver... [github.com]
Which seems to basically require Magisk
https://magiskmanager.com/ [magiskmanager.com]
Which, naturally, requires root...the system kind...that will trip SafetyNet and will likely prevent you from running your banking apps or Google Play...and while you can get Netflix from APKPure, you won't be able to get it from the Play Store, either.
So yes, it's entirely possible to tell apps "you absolutely have GPS permissions...I'm at the north pole...and not moving...and also I have one contact, named ...but it's getting progressively harder to do it.
Wsoldkgf Swegfwe, with the phone number of +1 111-111-1111...and my phone's unique ID changes daily, so...keep up!"
Re: Can you lie to apps yet ? (Score:2)
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Contact list: run the app in your work profile, it will only get the address book in your work profile, which you can setup to look real enough.
Can you assign apps to s specific profile? or does the profile have to be system wide? I haven't actually used them but if I could have gmail and outlook have different contact lists it would be awesome.
Re: Can you lie to apps yet ? (Score:2)
Android still has its old versions problem. (Score:3)
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MS does still support 8.1. Or at least most if not all software that worked in 8.1 still works in 10. And 10 works (in my case) on 10- and 15-year-old hardware, quite decently as long as the C: disk is SSD.
As for "when will my device get it?" ... mine will never get it. It was originally sold with 8, and got 9 when I bought it and 10 about 6 months after Google released it. And that's it. They said at purchase that it's supported for 2 releases and 3 years of security updates. From initial release, not purc
Re: Android still has its old versions problem. (Score:1)
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Cue the when will my device get it threads (Score:2)
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LG, too? (Score:2)
I've got an LG phone on Google Fi, which means I'll never see it. I don't know why LG has to plaster so much customization over Android because their settings system replacement is horrible and it takes them forever to update. Last LG phone I buy, that's for sure.
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I've got an LG phone on Google Fi, which means I'll never see it. I don't know why LG has to plaster so much customization over Android because their settings system replacement is horrible and it takes them forever to update. Last LG phone I buy, that's for sure.
You might like Pixel smartphones or smartphones with the Android One https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org] OS.
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My current Pixel app problem go-to solution (Score:1)