android  kitkat is the best android of all types of android and is the most perfect android,Google’s Android KitKat update was one of the most significant overhauls the search giant has made to its world-dominating OS in recent history. Launched at Google I/O 2013, Android KitKat was designed with ALL handsets in mind, not just flagship devices.

The updated software, previously very CPU/GPU-intensive, would now run on 512MB of RAM, for instance. That meant older handsets, right down to budget offerings and models from pre-2011, could run the software (providing OEMs shipped builds out, of course). KitKat in this respect was Google’s first attempt at fixing Android’s irksome fragmentation problem. 



A year or so later, we’re now anticipating the commercial release of Android L – yet another HUGE milestone in Google’s Android history. In our Android L Developer Preview Review, we covered off the basics: design changes, performance and new features. For pre-release software, it was ASTOUNDING.

Android KitKat adoption on handsets is growing pretty quickly too compared to previous iterations of the OS. According to the latest Google Developer figures, Android KitKat accounted for around 20% of ALL Android handsets that visited Google Play in August 2014. Jelly Bean remains the big dog, however, more than half of the market at 54.2%.


Android KitKat started out as version 4.4, but it's since had various small updates in the form of 4.4.1, 4.4.2, 4.4.3 and most recently Android 4.4.4 - this review has been updated to reflect the tweaks and changes experienced at each step to give you the most complete overview of the operating system.

KitKat really makes a mockery of the idea that iOS 7 is more refined than Android. This version of the platform is impressively fast, with stylish transitions and an intuitive feel that masks the potential complexity.

recomended:iphone 6 and iphone 6 plus

There's a paring back of the notification bar that introduces translucency and context awareness, enabling you to reclaim every pixel of your display for whatever you're doing.
There are a few new features here, and not all of them are perfect, but for the most part Google has cherry-picked improvements and refined them.
The contrast between the bloated OEM launchers and stock Android could hardly be starker, but there are still a few things that manufacturers like Samsung and LG could teach Google (split-screen apps is an obvious one).


The familiar white Google logo, followed by four pulsing colourful circles, still greets you on booting up, but the process has sped up dramatically as the platform has matured. When I checked version 4.1 on a Galaxy Nexus it took 34 seconds. The Nexus 4 running Android 4.2 Jelly Bean clocked in at 19 seconds.

Android 4.4.4 took around 20 seconds to boot up on the Nexus 5 used for testing. Not quite as fast as the Nexus 4, but when you consider that myGalaxy S3 running version 4.3 of Android took just shy of 40 seconds to boot up, you get a feel for how speedy that is.
As the home screen comes into view, you can immediately detect the lighter feel that Google was shooting for. The status bar icons at the top are now white.
The custom Roboto font looks like it has been on a diet, which makes it feel that little bit more crisp and elegant. Looking at menu highlights and icons, what once was blue is now generally grey.may be useful!!


22 Sep 2014

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