Google: All New Android Phones Must Ship With KitKat
According to MobileBloom,
 a leaked memo has been identified, stating that all Android smartphones
 will have to run KitKat or else Google will not endorse the handset. 
 The Android memo is the first sign that Google is
 finally sorting the problem it has with fragmentation.  Because Google 
offers hundreds of phones to customers from many manufacturers across 
the world, Google’s operating system is swiftly becoming fragmented.  
This issue is one of the top objections the operating system receives 
from application developers.
Apparently, the memo was sent from the Android
 team to its top OEM partners: Sony, Samsung, HTC, and LG who are all 
original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) for Google.  “Starting February 
2014, Google will no longer approved GMS distribution on new Android 
products that ship older platform releases,” the memo states. “Each 
platform release will have a ‘GMS approval window’ that typically closes
 nine months after the next Android platform release is publicly 
available.”  Any handset that does not get approval from Google Mobile 
Services (GMS) will not be able to ship with Google’s main applications 
which include Now, Maps and Google Play store.

Does this mean the end of all budget Android
 phones?  It could be! If real, the memo could mean an end to cheap 
 Android handsets and increase the price of middle of the road 
smartphones.  KitKat also has higher minimum specifications than 
foregoing operating systems.  This may mean that phones like the Samsung
 Galaxy core are no longer possible.  It has been said that KitKat has 
been coded to work better on lower powered smartphones. However, this 
could still have enough of a knock on effect to possibly  give the 
developing market to opponents such as Mozilla’s FireFox and Tizen.
Last year, Android CEO Sundar Pichai
 said him and his team were working on solutions for Android 
fragmentation. Figures showed, at the end of January 2014, that 
approximately 1.4 per cent of all Android smartphones were running the 
latest version of the operating system. While in contrast, over 80 per 
cent of iPhones were running iOS7, Apple’s latest operating system.  
Android released KitKat just weeks after iOS 7 was released for Apple’s 
devices.  It is uncertain how Nokia will be affected as they use older 
versions of Android. We will just have to wait and see. 
As always, if 
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comments in the section below.
 EnjOy..:)
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