Android is often considered to be an open platform, a harbor for free software of all kinds, including Adobe Flash, but ever since Android 4.1 Jelly Bean arrived in June 2012, Adobe itself stopped developing Flash for mobile and out-of-the-box support for the technology vanished. Technically, it was still easy to play Flash-based websites until 4.3, though, as the AOSP Android browser that was then pre-loaded on every smartphone still supported Flash. Mobile Chrome was one of the first to cut support for Adobe’s Flash, but you could still use third-party browsers like Dolphin, Puffin, or others to play back what appeared like a blank spot on Chrome.
NUU Mobile today announces its flagship Z8 32GB version is available through online retailers including Best Buy, Target, HSN, Amazon and NUU Mobile for $299.99 MSRP. The high-performance device boasts 4G LTE speeds, full HD touch screen, Sony Optics camera for flawless selfies, dual-4G LTE SIM capability, Android 5.0 Lollipop and an impressive 1.7 GHz Octa-core processer for increased speed and functionality.
According to some reports on a Greek Technology blog as well as on GSM Arena, Lenovo S60 has already started receiving the Android 5.0 Lollipop update in Greece.
Samsung might have made a mistake putting rather small batteries inside the Galaxy S6 and Galaxy S6 edge, but it seems part of the battery issues users are facing – on both existing devices and the S6 duo – are because of issues on Android 5.0 itself.