State of Android: Marshmallow and Lollipop keep growing market share

Last month Android 6.0 Marshmallow finally broke past the 1% mark in Google’s market share report. It doubled its spread since December, but now its growth is finally picking up. In fact, at the beginning of March Android 6.0 was on 2.3% of devices out there, so it’s grown by more than 100% in one month or so. Hopefully this means it will get its market share into the double digits soon.

Lollipop has finally become the most used version of the OS, taking KitKat’s place with 36.1% of the market compared to 34.3%. While Lollipop has grown 2% from the previous report, KitKat has lost 1.2% of the pie. And it’s bound to go down even more.

Jelly bean now has 22.3% market share, Ice Cream Sandwich is down to 2.3%, while Gingerbread is at 2.6% and Froyo’s still holding on to 0.1% of the market.

In the coming months more and more devices should be graced with updates to Marshmallow, so that version will obviously keep on growing. So too should Lollipop, while every other Android release is basically on the way out now – if incredibly slowly.

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New data shows how quickly Android apps can lose users and how the best retain the crowd

Ever wonder how the top Android apps manage to gain and retain superiority? Of course, there is no simple answer and the recipe for success is often extensive and convoluted. We won’t argue that brand awareness plays a major role, or that a nice feature set can give you an edge over the competition, but a new analysis on data collected from 125 million Android phones and Google Play reveals a rather interesting pattern and hints that the first few days in an app’s life cycle are far more important than a lot of you may think.

Andrew Chen, along with Ankit Jain – CEO of a mobile intelligence startup called “Quettra” are responsible for the analysis and their findings seem to show that it’s quite likely for an Android app to lose about as much as 80% of all its users within a month of the initial app install. The fact is that most Android users tend to shop around quite a bit for their apps, which usually means installing a bunch of alternatives, giving them a quick try and then possibly moving on to the next. This is why, as evident by the graph, as much as 75% of users typically leave the app on the same day they install it and at the end of the first week, that number is usually over 80%.

Now, one could argue that this is just because the average metric is distorted by the sea of objectively bad apps out there in the Android realm, but, interestingly enough, when they moved on to analize just the very top performing applications, Andrew Chen, and Ankit Jain stumbled upon a quite similar user retention pattern. The general timing seems to be the same and large drops tend to coincide, the only real difference being that the most popular apps have managed to lower the percent of losses significantly.

This all leads to one logical conclusion – apps need to capture users as quick as possible and impress them at first sight, or else the typical usage patterns are simply working against them and active user counts will plummet. As Ankit Jain puts it:

Users try out a lot of apps but decide which ones they want to ‘stop using’ within the first 3-7 days. For ‘decent’ apps, the majority of users retained for 7 days stick around much longer. The key to success is to get the users hooked during that critical first 3-7 day period.

What this translates to is developing experiences that are engaging at first sight. Some examples might include, giving the user a big bonus at the beginning of a game and a daily incentive to come back for more rewards, or perhaps in a more social or communications app – get them invested in the platform straight away, by guiding them through a profile creation wizard and linking them with current users and friends. These tactics may vary, but if you were wondering why your mobile app isn’t doing all that well, despite your endless efforts to add in new features, it might be time to invest more in a catchy description, some Google play multimedia content and a good retention scheme for first time…

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LeEco Le 2 gets a round of leaked images, has specs outed too

You may have heard of LeEco (formerly LeTV) when it became the first company to sell a smartphone powered by Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 820 chipset. In the meantime, many more handsets have chosen to employ that particular chip, but LeEco is apparently hard at work on its next device.

This is allegedly going to be called Le 2, which might mean it’s been created as the successor to the Le 1s. The pictures you can see below (click the thumbnails to look at the full-size versions) are said to be of the Le 2, covering a decent amount of angles.

LeEco Le 2

The LeEco Le 2 will reportedly sport either the Snapdragon 820 or the MediaTek Helio X20 chipset (there will be two variants), along with 4GB of RAM and a 21 MP main camera. The fingerprint sensor on the back is of the ultrasonic variety, and a USB Type-C port is on board for connectivity purposes and charging. Those are unfortunately all the spec details we have for now.

Speaker grill holes can be seen on both sides of that port, which may mean the phone will have two speakers. Then again, many smartphones use similar designs but only actually ship with one speaker, with the holes on the other side being purely cosmetic. Anyway, the frame of the handset seems to be metal. Its back cover could be metal too, or maybe not – it’s not easy to tell just from these shots.

If this is the real deal and it’s being worked on by the Chinese smartphone maker, we expect to hear much more about the Le 2 in the coming weeks.

Source (in Chinese) |…

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Verison and T-Mobile HTC One (M8) units are now receiving Android Marshmallow

As originally promised, HTC will bring Android Marshmallow to all of its flagship handsets, going back to and including the One (M8). Today the OTA has started seeding for both the Verison and T-Mobile carrier versions of the phone.

The former is receiving a software version 6.21.605.3 package, while the latter has the build 6.20.531.5. Both, however are based on Android 6.0 and bring about all the Marshmallow goodies Google’s OS has to offer, like run time permissions, app Dozing, Google Now on Tap and many others. The software should also come with new volume controls for notifications, audio and alarms and simplified screen capture.

In other news, T-Mobile is also spreading some Marshmallow love to its more price-conscious clients, owners of the LG G Stylo. It has also started receiving an Android 6.0 OTA, already spotted in the wild with a version number of “H63120b” and weighing in at 767MB.

Bear in mind that both carriers are conducting a staged rollout of all the updates, so it might be a few days before your handset receives the payload. T-Mobile has even cited a rather lengthy update window, ranging from March 7 to March 21, so a bit more patience might still be required.

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Save the date: Huawei P9 coming on April 6

Huawei sent out “save the date” notes to the press, promising to “Change the way you see the world” on April 6. It doesn’t take much to guess that this will be the Huawei P9 announcement.

The hashtag is pretty curious – #oo. Unless all rumors about the P9 so far are wrong, the phone will feature a dual camera setup, which can fairly accurately be rendered in ASCII art as oo.

We expect to see multiple versions of the P9, allegedly four in total. The mainstream model will have a 5.2″ screen and a Kirin 950 chipset, then there’s the P9max with a 6.2″ QHD+ screen, a P9lite isn’t out of the question either.

Thanks for sending this in, Momchil!

Source (in…

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HTC USA slashes the One A9 price by $100, get it only today for $399

HTC One A9 – the company’s premium metal-clad mid-ranger – is now at a discounted price. HTC USA is selling the One A9 for $399 instead of the regular $499.

All One A9 models are available at the lower price – you can choose between the unlocked flavor, AT&T, T-Mobile, or Sprint. The paintjob options you can choose from are Carbon Gray, Opal Silver, Deep garnet, and Topaz Gold.

The $100 discount is valid only for today, and it’s applied once you add the One A9 to your shopping basket.

You can check out our review to know more about the One A9.

HTC •…

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ZTE Blade V580 now official in Japan

ZTE seems to be on an announcement streak. Only hours ago, the Chinese manufacturer unveiled the ZTE Blade D2 in Thailand and Vietnam and today it has a new mid-ranger to add to its lineup. It is called the Blade V580 and was made official on the company’s Japanese website today. Coincidentally, however, it looks identical to the recent;y announced ZTE Blade V Plus Australia edition, so “new” is a bit of a stretch.

It is equipped with a 5.5-inch FullHD display and a 64bit MediaTek MT6753 SoC with a total of eight cores, clocked at 1.3 GHz. Memory is set at 2GB and 16GB of onboard storage. There is also a microSD card slot for up to 32GB more.

Other features on the handset include 4G LTE support and Dual SIM connectivity. There is also a fairly large 3,000 mAh battery on board, although it is not nearly as impressive as the 4,000 mAh one inside the Blade D2.

The ZTE Blade V580 has a rather modest camera setup, consisting of a 13MP main shooter and a 5MP selfie one. However, there is a fingerprint reader thrown in the mix, which is always a pleasant sight in a budget-friendly device. Other features include Wi-Fi b/g/n, Bluetooth 4.0 and GPS with A-GPS, the usual.

Pre-orders for the ZTE Blade V580 are going live in various online stores in Japan today and the handset will set you back JPY 27,800 ($246).

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Samsung Galaxy S7 and S7 edge pre-orders now shipping in the US, UK and Europe

The Samsung Galaxy S7 and S7 edge were supposed to ship to their new owners in the US, the UK and Europe this Friday, but you should expect delivery as soon as today.

This is if you have already pre-ordered, most UK retailers and carriers still show March 11 as the delivery date. Only the O2 lists “free next day delivery” if you order by 10pm.

By the way, some of you will be getting a Samsung Gear VR headset (if you ordered from Samsung, Carphone Warehouse or…

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Truecaller gets dialer, availability status, and new UI

Popular Truecaller app is getting a handful of new features. Top on the list is an integrated dialer, which means you can now dial a number from the Truecaller app itself.

The second addition is an availability check, which tells you if the person you are about to call is on another call (only works if they have the Truecaller app installed).

Lastly, the app also gets a fresh new look, with the search bar being moved to where Discover used to be.

Since the app now includes a dialer, Truecaller will be phasing out the Truedialer app eventually.

The new features will start rolling to Android users today.

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Aiwear VR headset works without computer or phone attached

VR headsets were hot items at the MWC, there we saw the HTC Vive and Samsung Gear VR. The Vive is just a head-mounted display – a tower PC does all the work (and there are cables tying you down). The Gear VR is tether-free, but requires the use of your smartphone (select few flagship Galaxy phones).

Aiwear (a company that mostly builds imitation smartwatches) has found a middle ground – its VR headset doesn’t have cables that get in the way and doesn’t need a phone either.

It brings its own display – 5.5″ 1080p – and its own processing power. That is where things get iffy. The Aiwear VR headset has a quad-core processor, a single gigabyte of RAM and runs an outdated Android 4.4 KitKat.

The Aiwear VR headset brings its own screen and processing power, no phone required

It does bring its own 9-axis motion sensor though and assuming that is more accurate than the one in your phone, you may see some benefit over just buying a Google Cardboard or a Mattel ViewMaster. At least those let you use a phone with a beefier…

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