not in all market places, if I am not mistaken. that still leaves you wnith the different implementations and GUI libraries of the different hardware providers. Android 4 is a great step forward there as well. for developers android was no fun until now and still is not. when a customer or my boss comes and asks for Android versions I try to make it clear that either we can point out two specific devices with a narrow range of OS version ( at least that is easy as version support for one device is limited) or we will end up in a mess with GUI design and testing. and then what leaves that from the unfiltered market share? not a lot of potential customers -whereas with one iOS version I still get most iPhone and iPod touch users at once.jensa wrote:Well, you do, as a content producer, actively choose what specs the device have to have to be able to install on it.ZenPunkHippy wrote:Not only that, they need to guarantee that it works on all devices so we don't we end up support emails saying "your app doesn't work on my obscure Chinese Android clone running Jelly Bean 4.x.2.1.y".
Android is great for those tech affine who want to write their own stuff, not for developers who want to supply to big markets.
best