← Back to context Comment by palata 9 hours ago Well GrapheneOS is not Google-certified, so it is not impacted by this :-). 2 comments palata Reply bitwize 5 hours ago AOSP releases are going to stop (or become late and cursory like Darwin releases), and new Pixels will not be able to run non-Google-certified operating systems :) Pfhortune 2 hours ago > and new Pixels will not be able to run non-Google-certified operating systems :)I haven't heard about this. Source?I think there has been much _speculation_ around this, but no proof that I am aware of.
bitwize 5 hours ago AOSP releases are going to stop (or become late and cursory like Darwin releases), and new Pixels will not be able to run non-Google-certified operating systems :) Pfhortune 2 hours ago > and new Pixels will not be able to run non-Google-certified operating systems :)I haven't heard about this. Source?I think there has been much _speculation_ around this, but no proof that I am aware of.
Pfhortune 2 hours ago > and new Pixels will not be able to run non-Google-certified operating systems :)I haven't heard about this. Source?I think there has been much _speculation_ around this, but no proof that I am aware of.
AOSP releases are going to stop (or become late and cursory like Darwin releases), and new Pixels will not be able to run non-Google-certified operating systems :)
> and new Pixels will not be able to run non-Google-certified operating systems :)
I haven't heard about this. Source?
I think there has been much _speculation_ around this, but no proof that I am aware of.