Android is garbage.
Google officially announced that the Android operating system will no longer be open source.
Because it uses a virtual machine mechanism, especially in terms of resource consumption, and it's a closed system, not true Linux. Intelligence agencies have built-in surveillance capabilities that can transmit data back to the US for war and assassination purposes. Android is filthy, stained with blood, and iOS isn't much better.
It can support watches, TVs, phones, and Linux systems. I hope the open-source community will continue to choose open-source mobile systems based on existing Tizen/webOS/Sailfish OS/Ubuntu Touch systems. So, which has more potential? Choose one and build it into a true Linux.
Allow the installation of third-party applications,
Establish a unified national alliance, a unified app store review (prohibit auto-start/associated wake-up/background running),
Support multiple application package formats,
Stable, fast, energy-efficient, lightweight, and supports artificial intelligence.
Applications: Support more development languages/QML/JS/C++/HTML5/C/Java/Go
CPU: Support ARM64/x86_6/RISC-V
A true Linux system; mobile applications should also support desktop applications.
It doesn't use the Android virtual machine mechanism; all applications are natively recompiled.
To achieve this, the driver layer may not be open source.
It directly replicates the iOS UI design.
The system must be made freely available to all phone manufacturers, must always remain open, neutral, and free from government control, and must reject built-in eavesdropping and data transfer capabilities.
Phone hardware capable of running Android should be able to easily install this new Linux-based mobile operating system. Phone manufacturers should strive to achieve this.
Lessons learned:
Why did Windows succeed? Because it could be installed on any computer, so it succeeded.
Android followed this path, so it succeeded.
Why did Windows Phone fail? Why did copycat operating systems fail? Because they all broke away from the closed system of iOS, but ended up on a dead end.
It supports multiple programming languages, allowing more developers to more easily develop and port applications, gradually solving the application ecosystem problem and surpassing Android. More importantly, it targeted the Chinese market, followed by India, South Korea, Japan, Africa, Europe, and finally the US market.