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Related point, do google android engineers dogfood android phones to themselves? I guess most of them would be Apple users.


Not a Google engineer, but I do keep around a device that represents “potato” specs that I test against when doing Android development. Not a perfect solution since there’s a bevy of old/low end SoCs with varying performance characteristics, but I figure it’s better than what many are undoubtedly doing which is testing against their newish flagship and calling it a day.

I used to do the same on iOS, but came to find that performance differences on older devices there generally weren’t nearly as severe and that iOS users as a whole tend to use newer devices. When combined with reasonably well written Swift, performance on old devices generally isn’t a problem.


Android encompasses $80 burner phones to what... like $2K flagships? It's a big target.


Isn't that the point? Make a system usable on low-spec devices.


A decent number do.




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