Google starts dedicated Android Canary subreddit
9 hours ago
Google has steadily released new Android Canary builds since July, and now has a new dedicated community for the program on Reddit.
Previously, Google used r/Android_Beta for Canary announcements. r/Android_Canary now exists, with the company citing the “growing adoption of the Android Canary program and your feedback.”
You will “get announcements posted by the Android team regarding the latest builds, have the opportunity to provide feedback, and discuss the latest updates with your fellow testers in your own dedicated community.”
This announcement does not bring any changes to the “Canary and Beta onboarding and OTA processes.”
Android Canary replaces Developer Previews, with the intended audience unchanged. These experimental builds are not meant for daily use. They are for “developers who want to explore and test the newest Android APIs.” Google tests these builds ahead of time, but there still might be “bugs or issues that could affect your device’s normal operation.”
Android 17 should go straight to Beta 1 instead of seeing 1-2 DPs. This approach requires using the Android Flash Tool initially to install the first build. Afterwards, “your device is automatically enrolled in the Android Canary for Pixel channel, and will be offered continuous over-the-air (OTA) updates to the latest Canary builds.”
There have been eight Canary releases to date, with various features making their way to Android 16 QPRs. However, Google does warn that “features introduced in Canary may not always make it into a stable Android release.”
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