There are some classicized rumors coming out every year. One of the most remarkable of these rumors in the technology world is that Google claims to end the world's most used operating system Android and Chorme OS operating system. Will this happen in 2018?
We have once again learned that in 2017 we should not believe in much of what we see on the internet. The claim that Google will end up Android and Chrome and offer a new operating system that it is working on is also open for comment. This includes Chromebooks, which are Google's production of Chrome OS. You've heard that you're working on a centralized operating system that works like an ecosystem instead of Android and Chrome OS. If you have not heard, now you have heard.
Although Chromebook laptops running Chrome OS are not popular in our country and are not sold directly by Google, they have an important global position. We all already know how popular Android is. It seems logical to bring these two operating systems together and bring a single operating system to be used both on the phone and on the PC. Moreover, Google branded computers may increase sales and reflect positively on the company. What are the real and inconsistent aspects of these claims? Let's look closely.
First, consistent data:
Google is working on an open source operating system called Fuchsia.
The company first reported this work in open source code published in the GitHub platform in August 2016.
Unlike other Google operating systems, Fuchsia is based on a kernel called Zirkon, not Linux. (Zirkon was formerly known as "Macenta".)
Zirkon was originally called a "real-time operating system", the operating system of embedded systems.
However, it is stated that these operating system codes can work on any device, including Fuchsia theoretically, devices, traffic lights, ATMs, smart TVs, smartphones, tablets and desktop computers. On any device connected to the Internet and a processor ...
Fuchsia took the first step to becoming a user interface in May 2017. It looks like our first stop will be our phones.
Fuchsia also began offering support for Apple's Swift programming language in November.
The SDK base for creating applications and user interfaces in Fuchsia is the same as Flutter, Google's core SDK used to build Chrome OS and Android apps.
The graphic engine on Flutter seems to have been optimized for Google's interface called Material Design.
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