KaiOS may explode in use in the not too distant future, as it matures. As some folks retreat to flip phones, but need the occasional 'smart' functionality, they tend to end up on a KaiOS phone. If the full QWERTY 'quick messaging' phone ever comes back, it'll probably run KaiOS.
Android is dominant at the moment and will be for a long time BUT eventually, they will get knocked off the top spot and it makes me wonder who will replace them when the technology changes and we move onto something else. Internet Explorer was once the dominant browser till Firefox came along and then Chrome and it eventually dropped off and only the die-hard fans and users are keeping the old browsers alive with a very tiny market share.
they're is a misconception that android has a lot of features compared to their competitors, the iphone has the same features with the added bonus of security
@@universenerdd its all about market share. The more popular it is the worse the security as hackers would be more interested against majority of the devices. Example MS Windows.
@@armstrong2450 except, android lets any app in, while ios has a manual review process, making it less susceptible no matter what market share, it's like comparing windows and linux and saying windows is more suseptible because of market share, sure that's one of the factors, but it ultimatly has better security in the long term
@@universenerdd but iOS is a really closed environment and unless a lot of people around you or most your friends own apple devices (which is not very likely) it just makes sense get the same shit but for a fair price on Android. Fuck security though, regardless of what you use were exposed and it's not a big deal lol
Wikipedia: Android (operating system): Android is a mobile operating system based on the Linux kernel. Google announces over 2 billion monthly active devices on Android Note from 2021-02-06 10:43:50.30 Microsoft by the Numbers - Microsoft News: There are more than 1 billion devices running Windows 10. there are 1.5 billion users of Windows
No it isn't. The unfortunate decision made by Nokia at a phone level, was to get into bed with Win Mobile. To people in the industry who'd seen MS offerings from CE onwards, it was obviously a mistake. You know also that phones were a sideline for Nokia?