-The source code for 4.2 is being pushed to AOSP right now. Look for
it under the name "android-4.2_r1" once the replication completes. The
matching development branch (for CTS contributions) is jb-mr1-dev, and
all the changes are merged into the master branch where platform
contributions are accepted.
-Nexus 10 is now the best choice for AOSP work on 4.2. Everything
except the GPU code is Open Source, and the only proprietary binaries
besides the GPU libraries are firmware files that get loaded into the
various peripheral chips. No flagship device so far has been so open,
and no flagship device so far has had that level of AOSP support at
launch.
-Nexus 7 3G isn't supported. We haven't been able to license the GSM
stack for AOSP yet, and without the GSM stack this device doesn't do
more than a plain Nexus 7.
-If AOSP starts pointing toward Nexus 4, you are having a bad problem,
and you will not go to space today (i.e.: there is nothing in AOSP
related to Nexus 4).
> -The source code for 4.2 is being pushed to AOSP right now. Look for
> it under the name "android-4.2_r1" once the replication completes. The
> matching development branch (for CTS contributions) is jb-mr1-dev, and
> all the changes are merged into the master branch where platform
> contributions are accepted.
> -Nexus 10 is now the best choice for AOSP work on 4.2. Everything
> except the GPU code is Open Source, and the only proprietary binaries
> besides the GPU libraries are firmware files that get loaded into the
> various peripheral chips. No flagship device so far has been so open,
> and no flagship device so far has had that level of AOSP support at
> launch.
> -Nexus 7 3G isn't supported. We haven't been able to license the GSM
> stack for AOSP yet, and without the GSM stack this device doesn't do
> more than a plain Nexus 7.
> -If AOSP starts pointing toward Nexus 4, you are having a bad problem,
> and you will not go to space today (i.e.: there is nothing in AOSP
> related to Nexus 4).
> -There is no support for 4.2 on Nexus S and Xoom. Those devices should
> continue using 4.1.2.
> JBQ
> PS: don't reply to this thread if you have specific questions. Start
> new threads instead.
> PPS: no ETAs for OTAs.
> --
> Jean-Baptiste M. "JBQ" Queru
> Technical Lead, Android Open Source Project, Google.
> Questions sent directly to me that have no reason for being private
> will likely get ignored or forwarded to a public forum with no further
> warning.
> --
> You received this message because you are subscribed to the "Android
> Building" mailing list.
> To post to this group, send email to android-building@googlegroups.com
> To unsubscribe from this group, send email to
> android-building+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com
> For more options, visit this group at
> http://groups.google.com/group/android-building?hl=en
This is more of a clarification so I'm not going to start a new thread: am I reading this correctly that AOSP support is stopping for the XOOM and Nexus S, or they're not *currently* supported with this release but will be supported in the future?
On Tuesday, November 13, 2012 9:29:31 AM UTC-8, Jean-Baptiste Queru wrote:
> Good news everyone!
> -The source code for 4.2 is being pushed to AOSP right now. Look for > it under the name "android-4.2_r1" once the replication completes. The > matching development branch (for CTS contributions) is jb-mr1-dev, and > all the changes are merged into the master branch where platform > contributions are accepted.
> -Nexus 10 is now the best choice for AOSP work on 4.2. Everything > except the GPU code is Open Source, and the only proprietary binaries > besides the GPU libraries are firmware files that get loaded into the > various peripheral chips. No flagship device so far has been so open, > and no flagship device so far has had that level of AOSP support at > launch.
> -Nexus 7 3G isn't supported. We haven't been able to license the GSM > stack for AOSP yet, and without the GSM stack this device doesn't do > more than a plain Nexus 7.
> -If AOSP starts pointing toward Nexus 4, you are having a bad problem, > and you will not go to space today (i.e.: there is nothing in AOSP > related to Nexus 4).
> -There is no support for 4.2 on Nexus S and Xoom. Those devices should > continue using 4.1.2.
> JBQ
> PS: don't reply to this thread if you have specific questions. Start > new threads instead.
> PPS: no ETAs for OTAs.
> -- > Jean-Baptiste M. "JBQ" Queru > Technical Lead, Android Open Source Project, Google.
> Questions sent directly to me that have no reason for being private > will likely get ignored or forwarded to a public forum with no further > warning.
On Tuesday, November 13, 2012 11:29:31 AM UTC-6, Jean-Baptiste Queru wrote:
> Good news everyone!
> -The source code for 4.2 is being pushed to AOSP right now. Look for > it under the name "android-4.2_r1" once the replication completes. The > matching development branch (for CTS contributions) is jb-mr1-dev, and > all the changes are merged into the master branch where platform > contributions are accepted.
> -Nexus 10 is now the best choice for AOSP work on 4.2. Everything > except the GPU code is Open Source, and the only proprietary binaries > besides the GPU libraries are firmware files that get loaded into the > various peripheral chips. No flagship device so far has been so open, > and no flagship device so far has had that level of AOSP support at > launch.
> -Nexus 7 3G isn't supported. We haven't been able to license the GSM > stack for AOSP yet, and without the GSM stack this device doesn't do > more than a plain Nexus 7.
> -If AOSP starts pointing toward Nexus 4, you are having a bad problem, > and you will not go to space today (i.e.: there is nothing in AOSP > related to Nexus 4).
> -There is no support for 4.2 on Nexus S and Xoom. Those devices should > continue using 4.1.2.
> JBQ
> PS: don't reply to this thread if you have specific questions. Start > new threads instead.
> PPS: no ETAs for OTAs.
> -- > Jean-Baptiste M. "JBQ" Queru > Technical Lead, Android Open Source Project, Google.
> Questions sent directly to me that have no reason for being private > will likely get ignored or forwarded to a public forum with no further > warning.
On Tue, Nov 13, 2012 at 9:52 AM, Artem Russakovskii <archon...@gmail.com> wrote:
> This is more of a clarification so I'm not going to start a new thread: am I
> reading this correctly that AOSP support is stopping for the XOOM and Nexus
> S, or they're not *currently* supported with this release but will be
> supported in the future?
> Thanks, JBQ.
> On Tuesday, November 13, 2012 9:29:31 AM UTC-8, Jean-Baptiste Queru wrote:
>> Good news everyone!
>> -The source code for 4.2 is being pushed to AOSP right now. Look for
>> it under the name "android-4.2_r1" once the replication completes. The
>> matching development branch (for CTS contributions) is jb-mr1-dev, and
>> all the changes are merged into the master branch where platform
>> contributions are accepted.
>> -Nexus 10 is now the best choice for AOSP work on 4.2. Everything
>> except the GPU code is Open Source, and the only proprietary binaries
>> besides the GPU libraries are firmware files that get loaded into the
>> various peripheral chips. No flagship device so far has been so open,
>> and no flagship device so far has had that level of AOSP support at
>> launch.
>> -Nexus 7 3G isn't supported. We haven't been able to license the GSM
>> stack for AOSP yet, and without the GSM stack this device doesn't do
>> more than a plain Nexus 7.
>> -If AOSP starts pointing toward Nexus 4, you are having a bad problem,
>> and you will not go to space today (i.e.: there is nothing in AOSP
>> related to Nexus 4).
>> -There is no support for 4.2 on Nexus S and Xoom. Those devices should
>> continue using 4.1.2.
>> JBQ
>> PS: don't reply to this thread if you have specific questions. Start
>> new threads instead.
>> PPS: no ETAs for OTAs.
>> --
>> Jean-Baptiste M. "JBQ" Queru
>> Technical Lead, Android Open Source Project, Google.
>> Questions sent directly to me that have no reason for being private
>> will likely get ignored or forwarded to a public forum with no further
>> warning.
> --
> You received this message because you are subscribed to the "Android
> Building" mailing list.
> To post to this group, send email to android-building@googlegroups.com
> To unsubscribe from this group, send email to
> android-building+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com
> For more options, visit this group at
> http://groups.google.com/group/android-building?hl=en
-- Jean-Baptiste M. "JBQ" Queru
Technical Lead, Android Open Source Project, Google.
Questions sent directly to me that have no reason for being private
will likely get ignored or forwarded to a public forum with no further
warning.
On Tue, Nov 13, 2012 at 9:58 AM, JF Dionne <jeanfrancoi...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Hi JBQ
> Thanks for the update.
> I guess that as usual you will start a new thread when kernel updates will
> be released ?
> JF
> --
> You received this message because you are subscribed to the "Android
> Building" mailing list.
> To post to this group, send email to android-building@googlegroups.com
> To unsubscribe from this group, send email to
> android-building+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com
> For more options, visit this group at
> http://groups.google.com/group/android-building?hl=en
-- Jean-Baptiste M. "JBQ" Queru
Technical Lead, Android Open Source Project, Google.
Questions sent directly to me that have no reason for being private
will likely get ignored or forwarded to a public forum with no further
warning.
> -The source code for 4.2 is being pushed to AOSP right now. Look for
> it under the name "android-4.2_r1" once the replication completes. The
> matching development branch (for CTS contributions) is jb-mr1-dev, and
> all the changes are merged into the master branch where platform
> contributions are accepted.
> -Nexus 10 is now the best choice for AOSP work on 4.2. Everything
> except the GPU code is Open Source, and the only proprietary binaries
> besides the GPU libraries are firmware files that get loaded into the
> various peripheral chips. No flagship device so far has been so open,
> and no flagship device so far has had that level of AOSP support at
> launch.
> -Nexus 7 3G isn't supported. We haven't been able to license the GSM
> stack for AOSP yet, and without the GSM stack this device doesn't do
> more than a plain Nexus 7.
> -If AOSP starts pointing toward Nexus 4, you are having a bad problem,
> and you will not go to space today (i.e.: there is nothing in AOSP
> related to Nexus 4).
> -There is no support for 4.2 on Nexus S and Xoom. Those devices should
> continue using 4.1.2.
> JBQ
> PS: don't reply to this thread if you have specific questions. Start
> new threads instead.
> PPS: no ETAs for OTAs.
> --
> Jean-Baptiste M. "JBQ" Queru
> Technical Lead, Android Open Source Project, Google.
> Questions sent directly to me that have no reason for being private
> will likely get ignored or forwarded to a public forum with no further
> warning.
> --
> You received this message because you are subscribed to the "Android
> Building" mailing list.
> To post to this group, send email to android-building@googlegroups.com
> To unsubscribe from this group, send email to
> android-building+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com
> For more options, visit this group at
> http://groups.google.com/group/android-building?hl=en
What was that about nexus 4 and aosp?
Nothing for nexus 4 in aosp?
Tell me I'm too sleepy to understand what it was you really meant to say.
On Nov 13, 2012 11:29 AM, "Jean-Baptiste Queru" <j...@android.com> wrote:
> -The source code for 4.2 is being pushed to AOSP right now. Look for
> it under the name "android-4.2_r1" once the replication completes. The
> matching development branch (for CTS contributions) is jb-mr1-dev, and
> all the changes are merged into the master branch where platform
> contributions are accepted.
> -Nexus 10 is now the best choice for AOSP work on 4.2. Everything
> except the GPU code is Open Source, and the only proprietary binaries
> besides the GPU libraries are firmware files that get loaded into the
> various peripheral chips. No flagship device so far has been so open,
> and no flagship device so far has had that level of AOSP support at
> launch.
> -Nexus 7 3G isn't supported. We haven't been able to license the GSM
> stack for AOSP yet, and without the GSM stack this device doesn't do
> more than a plain Nexus 7.
> -If AOSP starts pointing toward Nexus 4, you are having a bad problem,
> and you will not go to space today (i.e.: there is nothing in AOSP
> related to Nexus 4).
> -There is no support for 4.2 on Nexus S and Xoom. Those devices should
> continue using 4.1.2.
> JBQ
> PS: don't reply to this thread if you have specific questions. Start
> new threads instead.
> PPS: no ETAs for OTAs.
> --
> Jean-Baptiste M. "JBQ" Queru
> Technical Lead, Android Open Source Project, Google.
> Questions sent directly to me that have no reason for being private
> will likely get ignored or forwarded to a public forum with no further
> warning.
> --
> You received this message because you are subscribed to the "Android
> Building" mailing list.
> To post to this group, send email to android-building@googlegroups.com
> To unsubscribe from this group, send email to
> android-building+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com
> For more options, visit this group at
> http://groups.google.com/group/android-building?hl=en
On Tuesday, November 13, 2012 12:29:31 PM UTC-5, Jean-Baptiste Queru wrote:
> Good news everyone!
> -The source code for 4.2 is being pushed to AOSP right now. Look for > it under the name "android-4.2_r1" once the replication completes. The > matching development branch (for CTS contributions) is jb-mr1-dev, and > all the changes are merged into the master branch where platform > contributions are accepted.
> -Nexus 10 is now the best choice for AOSP work on 4.2. Everything > except the GPU code is Open Source, and the only proprietary binaries > besides the GPU libraries are firmware files that get loaded into the > various peripheral chips. No flagship device so far has been so open, > and no flagship device so far has had that level of AOSP support at > launch.
> -Nexus 7 3G isn't supported. We haven't been able to license the GSM > stack for AOSP yet, and without the GSM stack this device doesn't do > more than a plain Nexus 7.
> -If AOSP starts pointing toward Nexus 4, you are having a bad problem, > and you will not go to space today (i.e.: there is nothing in AOSP > related to Nexus 4).
> -There is no support for 4.2 on Nexus S and Xoom. Those devices should > continue using 4.1.2.
> JBQ
> PS: don't reply to this thread if you have specific questions. Start > new threads instead.
> PPS: no ETAs for OTAs.
> -- > Jean-Baptiste M. "JBQ" Queru > Technical Lead, Android Open Source Project, Google.
> Questions sent directly to me that have no reason for being private > will likely get ignored or forwarded to a public forum with no further > warning.
On Tue, Nov 13, 2012 at 10:20 AM, Daniel Goller <mor...@gmail.com> wrote:
> What was that about nexus 4 and aosp?
> Nothing for nexus 4 in aosp?
> Tell me I'm too sleepy to understand what it was you really meant to say.
> On Nov 13, 2012 11:29 AM, "Jean-Baptiste Queru" <j...@android.com> wrote:
>> Good news everyone!
>> -The source code for 4.2 is being pushed to AOSP right now. Look for
>> it under the name "android-4.2_r1" once the replication completes. The
>> matching development branch (for CTS contributions) is jb-mr1-dev, and
>> all the changes are merged into the master branch where platform
>> contributions are accepted.
>> -Nexus 10 is now the best choice for AOSP work on 4.2. Everything
>> except the GPU code is Open Source, and the only proprietary binaries
>> besides the GPU libraries are firmware files that get loaded into the
>> various peripheral chips. No flagship device so far has been so open,
>> and no flagship device so far has had that level of AOSP support at
>> launch.
>> -Nexus 7 3G isn't supported. We haven't been able to license the GSM
>> stack for AOSP yet, and without the GSM stack this device doesn't do
>> more than a plain Nexus 7.
>> -If AOSP starts pointing toward Nexus 4, you are having a bad problem,
>> and you will not go to space today (i.e.: there is nothing in AOSP
>> related to Nexus 4).
>> -There is no support for 4.2 on Nexus S and Xoom. Those devices should
>> continue using 4.1.2.
>> JBQ
>> PS: don't reply to this thread if you have specific questions. Start
>> new threads instead.
>> PPS: no ETAs for OTAs.
>> --
>> Jean-Baptiste M. "JBQ" Queru
>> Technical Lead, Android Open Source Project, Google.
>> Questions sent directly to me that have no reason for being private
>> will likely get ignored or forwarded to a public forum with no further
>> warning.
>> --
>> You received this message because you are subscribed to the "Android
>> Building" mailing list.
>> To post to this group, send email to android-building@googlegroups.com
>> To unsubscribe from this group, send email to
>> android-building+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com
>> For more options, visit this group at
>> http://groups.google.com/group/android-building?hl=en
> --
> You received this message because you are subscribed to the "Android
> Building" mailing list.
> To post to this group, send email to android-building@googlegroups.com
> To unsubscribe from this group, send email to
> android-building+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com
> For more options, visit this group at
> http://groups.google.com/group/android-building?hl=en
-- Jean-Baptiste M. "JBQ" Queru
Technical Lead, Android Open Source Project, Google.
Questions sent directly to me that have no reason for being private
will likely get ignored or forwarded to a public forum with no further
warning.
On Tuesday, November 13, 2012 6:29:31 PM UTC+1, Jean-Baptiste Queru wrote:
> Good news everyone!
> -The source code for 4.2 is being pushed to AOSP right now. Look for > it under the name "android-4.2_r1" once the replication completes. The > matching development branch (for CTS contributions) is jb-mr1-dev, and > all the changes are merged into the master branch where platform > contributions are accepted.
> -Nexus 10 is now the best choice for AOSP work on 4.2. Everything > except the GPU code is Open Source, and the only proprietary binaries > besides the GPU libraries are firmware files that get loaded into the > various peripheral chips. No flagship device so far has been so open, > and no flagship device so far has had that level of AOSP support at > launch.
> -Nexus 7 3G isn't supported. We haven't been able to license the GSM > stack for AOSP yet, and without the GSM stack this device doesn't do > more than a plain Nexus 7.
> -If AOSP starts pointing toward Nexus 4, you are having a bad problem, > and you will not go to space today (i.e.: there is nothing in AOSP > related to Nexus 4).
> -There is no support for 4.2 on Nexus S and Xoom. Those devices should > continue using 4.1.2.
> JBQ
> PS: don't reply to this thread if you have specific questions. Start > new threads instead.
> PPS: no ETAs for OTAs.
> -- > Jean-Baptiste M. "JBQ" Queru > Technical Lead, Android Open Source Project, Google.
> Questions sent directly to me that have no reason for being private > will likely get ignored or forwarded to a public forum with no further > warning.
Nexus S is not supported ?! Why ? No reason!!! You know Google engineers that Nexus S can perfectly handle 4.2 but you will not do it for commercial reasons! Shame!
On Tuesday, November 13, 2012 6:29:31 PM UTC+1, Jean-Baptiste Queru wrote:
> Good news everyone!
> -The source code for 4.2 is being pushed to AOSP right now. Look for > it under the name "android-4.2_r1" once the replication completes. The > matching development branch (for CTS contributions) is jb-mr1-dev, and > all the changes are merged into the master branch where platform > contributions are accepted.
> -Nexus 10 is now the best choice for AOSP work on 4.2. Everything > except the GPU code is Open Source, and the only proprietary binaries > besides the GPU libraries are firmware files that get loaded into the > various peripheral chips. No flagship device so far has been so open, > and no flagship device so far has had that level of AOSP support at > launch.
> -Nexus 7 3G isn't supported. We haven't been able to license the GSM > stack for AOSP yet, and without the GSM stack this device doesn't do > more than a plain Nexus 7.
> -If AOSP starts pointing toward Nexus 4, you are having a bad problem, > and you will not go to space today (i.e.: there is nothing in AOSP > related to Nexus 4).
> -There is no support for 4.2 on Nexus S and Xoom. Those devices should > continue using 4.1.2.
> JBQ
> PS: don't reply to this thread if you have specific questions. Start > new threads instead.
> PPS: no ETAs for OTAs.
> -- > Jean-Baptiste M. "JBQ" Queru > Technical Lead, Android Open Source Project, Google.
> Questions sent directly to me that have no reason for being private > will likely get ignored or forwarded to a public forum with no further > warning.
> What was that about nexus 4 and aosp?
> Nothing for nexus 4 in aosp?
> Tell me I'm too sleepy to understand what it was you really meant to say.
> On Nov 13, 2012 11:29 AM, "Jean-Baptiste Queru" <j...@android.com> wrote:
>> Good news everyone!
>> -The source code for 4.2 is being pushed to AOSP right now. Look for
>> it under the name "android-4.2_r1" once the replication completes. The
>> matching development branch (for CTS contributions) is jb-mr1-dev, and
>> all the changes are merged into the master branch where platform
>> contributions are accepted.
>> -Nexus 10 is now the best choice for AOSP work on 4.2. Everything
>> except the GPU code is Open Source, and the only proprietary binaries
>> besides the GPU libraries are firmware files that get loaded into the
>> various peripheral chips. No flagship device so far has been so open,
>> and no flagship device so far has had that level of AOSP support at
>> launch.
>> -Nexus 7 3G isn't supported. We haven't been able to license the GSM
>> stack for AOSP yet, and without the GSM stack this device doesn't do
>> more than a plain Nexus 7.
>> -If AOSP starts pointing toward Nexus 4, you are having a bad problem,
>> and you will not go to space today (i.e.: there is nothing in AOSP
>> related to Nexus 4).
>> -There is no support for 4.2 on Nexus S and Xoom. Those devices should
>> continue using 4.1.2.
>> JBQ
>> PS: don't reply to this thread if you have specific questions. Start
>> new threads instead.
>> PPS: no ETAs for OTAs.
>> --
>> Jean-Baptiste M. "JBQ" Queru
>> Technical Lead, Android Open Source Project, Google.
>> Questions sent directly to me that have no reason for being private
>> will likely get ignored or forwarded to a public forum with no further
>> warning.
>> --
>> You received this message because you are subscribed to the "Android
>> Building" mailing list.
>> To post to this group, send email to android-building@googlegroups.com
>> To unsubscribe from this group, send email to
>> android-building+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com
>> For more options, visit this group at
>> http://groups.google.com/group/android-building?hl=en
> --
> You received this message because you are subscribed to the "Android
> Building" mailing list.
> To post to this group, send email to android-building@googlegroups.com
> To unsubscribe from this group, send email to
> android-building+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com
> For more options, visit this group at
> http://groups.google.com/group/android-building?hl=en
I can't comment on the future of Nexus 4 in AOSP, sorry.
JBQ
On Tue, Nov 13, 2012 at 10:34 AM, Lou <lou.fourq...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Can you please clarify what you said about the Nexus 4 and AOSP? Are you saying that Nexus 4 currently isn't in AOSP, or won't ever be in AOSP?
> --
> You received this message because you are subscribed to the "Android Building" mailing list.
> To post to this group, send email to android-building@googlegroups.com
> To unsubscribe from this group, send email to
> android-building+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com
> For more options, visit this group at
> http://groups.google.com/group/android-building?hl=en
-- Jean-Baptiste M. "JBQ" Queru
Technical Lead, Android Open Source Project, Google.
Questions sent directly to me that have no reason for being private
will likely get ignored or forwarded to a public forum with no further
warning.
On Tue, Nov 13, 2012 at 10:38 AM, Andreas Lusth <exo...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Can you elaborate on why there is no support for the Nexus S?
> On Tuesday, November 13, 2012 6:29:31 PM UTC+1, Jean-Baptiste Queru wrote:
>> Good news everyone!
>> -The source code for 4.2 is being pushed to AOSP right now. Look for
>> it under the name "android-4.2_r1" once the replication completes. The
>> matching development branch (for CTS contributions) is jb-mr1-dev, and
>> all the changes are merged into the master branch where platform
>> contributions are accepted.
>> -Nexus 10 is now the best choice for AOSP work on 4.2. Everything
>> except the GPU code is Open Source, and the only proprietary binaries
>> besides the GPU libraries are firmware files that get loaded into the
>> various peripheral chips. No flagship device so far has been so open,
>> and no flagship device so far has had that level of AOSP support at
>> launch.
>> -Nexus 7 3G isn't supported. We haven't been able to license the GSM
>> stack for AOSP yet, and without the GSM stack this device doesn't do
>> more than a plain Nexus 7.
>> -If AOSP starts pointing toward Nexus 4, you are having a bad problem,
>> and you will not go to space today (i.e.: there is nothing in AOSP
>> related to Nexus 4).
>> -There is no support for 4.2 on Nexus S and Xoom. Those devices should
>> continue using 4.1.2.
>> JBQ
>> PS: don't reply to this thread if you have specific questions. Start
>> new threads instead.
>> PPS: no ETAs for OTAs.
>> --
>> Jean-Baptiste M. "JBQ" Queru
>> Technical Lead, Android Open Source Project, Google.
>> Questions sent directly to me that have no reason for being private
>> will likely get ignored or forwarded to a public forum with no further
>> warning.
> --
> You received this message because you are subscribed to the "Android
> Building" mailing list.
> To post to this group, send email to android-building@googlegroups.com
> To unsubscribe from this group, send email to
> android-building+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com
> For more options, visit this group at
> http://groups.google.com/group/android-building?hl=en
-- Jean-Baptiste M. "JBQ" Queru
Technical Lead, Android Open Source Project, Google.
Questions sent directly to me that have no reason for being private
will likely get ignored or forwarded to a public forum with no further
warning.
On Tuesday, November 13, 2012 9:29:31 AM UTC-8, Jean-Baptiste Queru wrote:
> Good news everyone!
> -The source code for 4.2 is being pushed to AOSP right now. Look for > it under the name "android-4.2_r1" once the replication completes. The > matching development branch (for CTS contributions) is jb-mr1-dev, and > all the changes are merged into the master branch where platform > contributions are accepted.
> -Nexus 10 is now the best choice for AOSP work on 4.2. Everything > except the GPU code is Open Source, and the only proprietary binaries > besides the GPU libraries are firmware files that get loaded into the > various peripheral chips. No flagship device so far has been so open, > and no flagship device so far has had that level of AOSP support at > launch.
> -Nexus 7 3G isn't supported. We haven't been able to license the GSM > stack for AOSP yet, and without the GSM stack this device doesn't do > more than a plain Nexus 7.
> -If AOSP starts pointing toward Nexus 4, you are having a bad problem, > and you will not go to space today (i.e.: there is nothing in AOSP > related to Nexus 4).
> -There is no support for 4.2 on Nexus S and Xoom. Those devices should > continue using 4.1.2.
> JBQ
> PS: don't reply to this thread if you have specific questions. Start > new threads instead.
> PPS: no ETAs for OTAs.
> -- > Jean-Baptiste M. "JBQ" Queru > Technical Lead, Android Open Source Project, Google.
> Questions sent directly to me that have no reason for being private > will likely get ignored or forwarded to a public forum with no further > warning.
Belittling the AOSP guys in a public post isn't going to get you what you want...4.2 will easily be supported by the Xoom and the Nexus S just not officially, and not in AOSP, at some point you have to retire a device with less then a GB of RAM.
On Tuesday, November 13, 2012 1:38:19 PM UTC-5, Alaeddine Ghribi wrote:
> Nexus S is not supported ?! Why ? No reason!!! You know Google engineers > that Nexus S can perfectly handle 4.2 but you will not do it for commercial > reasons! Shame!
> On Tuesday, November 13, 2012 6:29:31 PM UTC+1, Jean-Baptiste Queru wrote:
>> Good news everyone!
>> -The source code for 4.2 is being pushed to AOSP right now. Look for >> it under the name "android-4.2_r1" once the replication completes. The >> matching development branch (for CTS contributions) is jb-mr1-dev, and >> all the changes are merged into the master branch where platform >> contributions are accepted.
>> -Nexus 10 is now the best choice for AOSP work on 4.2. Everything >> except the GPU code is Open Source, and the only proprietary binaries >> besides the GPU libraries are firmware files that get loaded into the >> various peripheral chips. No flagship device so far has been so open, >> and no flagship device so far has had that level of AOSP support at >> launch.
>> -Nexus 7 3G isn't supported. We haven't been able to license the GSM >> stack for AOSP yet, and without the GSM stack this device doesn't do >> more than a plain Nexus 7.
>> -If AOSP starts pointing toward Nexus 4, you are having a bad problem, >> and you will not go to space today (i.e.: there is nothing in AOSP >> related to Nexus 4).
>> -There is no support for 4.2 on Nexus S and Xoom. Those devices should >> continue using 4.1.2.
>> JBQ
>> PS: don't reply to this thread if you have specific questions. Start >> new threads instead.
>> PPS: no ETAs for OTAs.
>> -- >> Jean-Baptiste M. "JBQ" Queru >> Technical Lead, Android Open Source Project, Google.
>> Questions sent directly to me that have no reason for being private >> will likely get ignored or forwarded to a public forum with no further >> warning.
I hope there will eventually be support for the Nexus S. Most of the new features, except photoshpere don't require any extra hardware juice, so I don't see why it shouldn't get at least the new UI features.
On Tuesday, November 13, 2012 7:29:31 PM UTC+2, Jean-Baptiste Queru wrote:
> Good news everyone!
> -The source code for 4.2 is being pushed to AOSP right now. Look for > it under the name "android-4.2_r1" once the replication completes. The > matching development branch (for CTS contributions) is jb-mr1-dev, and > all the changes are merged into the master branch where platform > contributions are accepted.
> -Nexus 10 is now the best choice for AOSP work on 4.2. Everything > except the GPU code is Open Source, and the only proprietary binaries > besides the GPU libraries are firmware files that get loaded into the > various peripheral chips. No flagship device so far has been so open, > and no flagship device so far has had that level of AOSP support at > launch.
> -Nexus 7 3G isn't supported. We haven't been able to license the GSM > stack for AOSP yet, and without the GSM stack this device doesn't do > more than a plain Nexus 7.
> -If AOSP starts pointing toward Nexus 4, you are having a bad problem, > and you will not go to space today (i.e.: there is nothing in AOSP > related to Nexus 4).
> -There is no support for 4.2 on Nexus S and Xoom. Those devices should > continue using 4.1.2.
> JBQ
> PS: don't reply to this thread if you have specific questions. Start > new threads instead.
> PPS: no ETAs for OTAs.
> -- > Jean-Baptiste M. "JBQ" Queru > Technical Lead, Android Open Source Project, Google.
> Questions sent directly to me that have no reason for being private > will likely get ignored or forwarded to a public forum with no further > warning.
On Tuesday, November 13, 2012 12:29:31 PM UTC-5, Jean-Baptiste Queru wrote:
> Good news everyone!
> -The source code for 4.2 is being pushed to AOSP right now. Look for > it under the name "android-4.2_r1" once the replication completes. The > matching development branch (for CTS contributions) is jb-mr1-dev, and > all the changes are merged into the master branch where platform > contributions are accepted.
> -Nexus 10 is now the best choice for AOSP work on 4.2. Everything > except the GPU code is Open Source, and the only proprietary binaries > besides the GPU libraries are firmware files that get loaded into the > various peripheral chips. No flagship device so far has been so open, > and no flagship device so far has had that level of AOSP support at > launch.
> -Nexus 7 3G isn't supported. We haven't been able to license the GSM > stack for AOSP yet, and without the GSM stack this device doesn't do > more than a plain Nexus 7.
> -If AOSP starts pointing toward Nexus 4, you are having a bad problem, > and you will not go to space today (i.e.: there is nothing in AOSP > related to Nexus 4).
> -There is no support for 4.2 on Nexus S and Xoom. Those devices should > continue using 4.1.2.
> JBQ
> PS: don't reply to this thread if you have specific questions. Start > new threads instead.
> PPS: no ETAs for OTAs.
> -- > Jean-Baptiste M. "JBQ" Queru > Technical Lead, Android Open Source Project, Google.
> Questions sent directly to me that have no reason for being private > will likely get ignored or forwarded to a public forum with no further > warning.
On Tuesday, November 13, 2012 1:44:30 PM UTC-5, Jean-Baptiste Queru wrote:
> I can't comment on the future of Nexus 4 in AOSP, sorry.
> JBQ
> On Tue, Nov 13, 2012 at 10:34 AM, Lou <lou.fo...@gmail.com <javascript:>> > wrote: > > Can you please clarify what you said about the Nexus 4 and AOSP? Are you > saying that Nexus 4 currently isn't in AOSP, or won't ever be in AOSP?
> > -- > > You received this message because you are subscribed to the "Android > Building" mailing list. > > To post to this group, send email to android-...@googlegroups.com<javascript:> > > To unsubscribe from this group, send email to > > android-buildi...@googlegroups.com <javascript:> > > For more options, visit this group at > > http://groups.google.com/group/android-building?hl=en
> -- > Jean-Baptiste M. "JBQ" Queru > Technical Lead, Android Open Source Project, Google.
> Questions sent directly to me that have no reason for being private > will likely get ignored or forwarded to a public forum with no further > warning.
<rochon.patr...@gmail.com> wrote:
> what about the yakju image ?
> On Tuesday, November 13, 2012 1:44:30 PM UTC-5, Jean-Baptiste Queru wrote:
>> I can't comment on the future of Nexus 4 in AOSP, sorry.
>> JBQ
>> On Tue, Nov 13, 2012 at 10:34 AM, Lou <lou.fo...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> > Can you please clarify what you said about the Nexus 4 and AOSP? Are you
>> > saying that Nexus 4 currently isn't in AOSP, or won't ever be in AOSP?
>> > --
>> > You received this message because you are subscribed to the "Android
>> > Building" mailing list.
>> > To post to this group, send email to android-...@googlegroups.com
>> > To unsubscribe from this group, send email to
>> > android-buildi...@googlegroups.com
>> > For more options, visit this group at
>> > http://groups.google.com/group/android-building?hl=en
>> --
>> Jean-Baptiste M. "JBQ" Queru
>> Technical Lead, Android Open Source Project, Google.
>> Questions sent directly to me that have no reason for being private
>> will likely get ignored or forwarded to a public forum with no further
>> warning.
> --
> You received this message because you are subscribed to the "Android
> Building" mailing list.
> To post to this group, send email to android-building@googlegroups.com
> To unsubscribe from this group, send email to
> android-building+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com
> For more options, visit this group at
> http://groups.google.com/group/android-building?hl=en
-- Jean-Baptiste M. "JBQ" Queru
Technical Lead, Android Open Source Project, Google.
Questions sent directly to me that have no reason for being private
will likely get ignored or forwarded to a public forum with no further
warning.