As the gradual adoption of Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich
continues, its successor Jelly Bean is also picking up steam. The latest
numbers from Google show that 29.1 percent of Android devices that
recently accessed Google Play were running Ice Cream Sandwich, compared
to 15.9 percent last August and a mere .6 percent
this time last year. Jelly Bean 4.1 and 4.2 combined, meanwhile, are
now on 10.2 percent of devices, up dramatically from the .8 percent we
saw in August. Jelly Bean passed the 10 percent mark a couple of months
earlier than Ice Cream Sandwich, which officially did so around the launch of the Nexus 7 in July.

The update between Android 2.3 Gingerbread and 4.0 was more dramatic than the change from 4.0 to 4.1, and juggernaut Samsung has been pushing Jelly Bean to its flagship phones, so it's not necessarily surprising that adoption is a bit faster so far. Even less surprisingly, Gingerbread has maintained a substantial 47.6 percent — though this is actually the first time we've seen it drop below half the Android install base according to Google's numbers.
The update between Android 2.3 Gingerbread and 4.0 was more dramatic than the change from 4.0 to 4.1, and juggernaut Samsung has been pushing Jelly Bean to its flagship phones, so it's not necessarily surprising that adoption is a bit faster so far. Even less surprisingly, Gingerbread has maintained a substantial 47.6 percent — though this is actually the first time we've seen it drop below half the Android install base according to Google's numbers.
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