
Alas, most Android devices still aren’t running 5.0. In the grand scheme, really, hardly any are.
Google has just updated its official version-by-version usage chart, which breaks down what share of the Android market each release has.
Lollipop’s current count, almost exactly three months after its public launch: 1.6%.
The only version of Android with less of the pie is Android 2.2 (Froyo) — the oldest build that Google still tracks. The overwhelming bulk of the handsets out there are running Android 4.1/4.2/4.3 (collectively known as “Jelly Bean”) with 44.5 percent, and Android 4.4 (KitKat) with 39.7 percent.
If there’s an upside, it’s that a good chunk of important user-facing stuff once built directly into Android (things like Gmail, Google Maps, Google Wallet, etc.) is now distributed through Google Play. This allows them to be upgraded without a full OS update — and, more importantly, without the phone makers having to do anything.
You won’t get the OS-level changes, Lollipop’s new look, the performance/security tweaks, the battery improvements, etc. — but most apps should work all the same.
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