One of the key features of Android 10 is the new feature
called Project Mainline, which allows you to receive important system updates
directly through the Google Play app store. As it turned out, this is not all
the possibilities of a promising Google initiative.
Project Mainline allows you to test Android updates without
installing on a smartphone. This feature will be especially useful for
administrators who deal with many devices and want to be sure of the safety and
security of data after the transition to the next version of Android. In
addition, Project Mainline will interest OEMs as it enables them to test
updates without harming the end device.
When using Project Mainline, a virtual partition is created
in the smartphone’s internal memory on which the operating system is installed.
After that, the user can try out the new features and study the update. It is
important to note that not all major Android components will be available in
this mode. After exploring the capabilities of the new OS for its compatibility
with settings and software, the user will need to restart the gadget in order
to "roll back" the update.
Project Mainline is currently in an early stage of testing,
and it is unclear when Google will make this feature publicly available. It is
possible that the ability to check for updates will appear with the release of
Android 11 next year.
The future is a strange thing. Ten years pass, and you seem
to be in the future, but how it comes is hard to notice. Look back ten years
ago - then you could not even think that you could not live without the
Internet and a smartphone in your pocket. What awaits us in the next decade?
Centuries? Millennium? The future is such a strange thing that you can guess an
infinite number of times what will happen in ten years, and you will be right
in some ways, but this rightness will sink in the thick of new products that
will demolish the past, like a crane an old building.
iOS 13 invites to the
"dark side"
Apple announced public availability for downloading updated
operating systems for its mobile devices: iOS 13.0 for iPhone smartphones, as
well as watchOS 6.0 for Apple Watch smart watches. Recall that for iPad tablets,
the company now releases a separate operating system - iPadOS.
Free downloads of iOS 13 and watchOS 6 for their respective
Apple gadgets are available today. After upgrading to watchOS 6, Apple Watch
users will be able to run updates directly from the watch’s settings menu, but
iPhone will still be needed to download new applications.
OS updates took place exactly on the schedule promised by
the company at the By Innovation Only event in early September 2019, in the
framework of which the announcement of the fifth-generation Watch, the seventh
revision of the iPad tablet, three new iPhone and two new services, Arcade
gaming and streaming Apple TV +
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