Originally posted by sverris
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Google Finally Shifting To "Upstream First" Linux Kernel Approach For Android Features
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Originally posted by mdedetrich View Post
afaik propitiatory drivers which require kernel patches to work. Qualcomm with their GPU's are biggest offenders.
There are some things that are maintained out of tree due to being bigger changes I think. Is Binder upstream yet, or even planned for it to be upstream?
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Originally posted by sinepgib View Post
That won't happen because programmed obsolescence is the fabric of their businesses. There's just not only a lack of incentive but an actual pressing reason for them to avoid it.
Also the bloatware kpedersen mentioned, your data is part of their revenue and making it so you can easily switch the running system is damaging for them.
What exactly do Android developers care about here?
That's not PR, but an actual technical reason. This kind of notice, intended to pressure OEMs, is not precisely something I'd call PR. If anything it makes them look a bit mob-ish.
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The bottom line for me is, people buying Android phones has resulted in Google pushing quite a bit of improvement to the Linux kernel over the years. If they leave the FOSS ecosystem eventually, others will be able to build similar solutions with much less work than would have been required before those contributions.
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I go back and forth on this.
I don't ever want to see Google's spyware mainlined into the kernel so I say it should cost them more to conduct espionage on the citizens. The more it cost them, the better. I want to increase their costs, dramatically. Google can go pound sand. Conversely, I suspect Google doesn't want anybody to know the breadth and depth of their spying operation so that probably wouldn't get mainlined anyways.
At the end of the day I really don't want anything from Google or anything to do with Google because it's all fruit from a poisoned tree. Google is a bad corporate actor and they exemplify and are the living embodiment of everything that anybody has ever written about bad corporate shenanigans and disreputable business practices.
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Originally posted by stormcrow View Post
PR can have technical reasons. Public relations is ... get this -- establishing and maintaining relationships with the public through things the public need or should know about your product. The term itself is neutral.
Originally posted by stormcrow View PostAre you telling me the Android developer community isn't part of the public? I've already outlined what.
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Originally posted by Old Grouch View PostHmm. Could this be an easy PR win for Google, right before they pivot to using the Zircon kernel from Fuchsia OS with Starnix instead of Linux as the Android kernel.
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Originally posted by caligula View PostI wonder how this would help at all. The SoC and phone vendors don't want to provide more than 0 to 3 years of support (starting from the product launch day). Any Android device will have millions of lines of code for proprietary drivers and firmware.
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Originally posted by sverris View PostWhy not switching to mainline Linux kernel entirely?
2023-2024: Reducing Technical Debt
○Upstream First Development model for new features
○Work toward upstreaming all out-of-tree patches in Android Common
Kernels
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