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(Image credit: Amazon)
(Image credit: Amazon)
Amazonhas only recently refreshed itsFire TV Stickstreaming devices, with the4K and 4K Max modelsgetting spec boosts, but there could be more radical changes afoot.
A report claims that Amazon is looking to swap its currentFire TVOS for a new, in-house operating system that isn’t built usingAndroid.
Since introducing its first Fire TV streaming device in 2014, Amazon has used an open source form of Android as the bedrock for the user experience. It has then built the Fire TV OS layer on top.
This has allowed developers to easily adapt apps for Fire TV devices and users have even been able to sideload Android apps onto their Sticks and set-top-boxes. A completely new operating system would change all that.
Indeed,Lowpass, which claims to have learned Amazon’s plans through multiple sources, writes that the company has been approaching partners and app developers about the transition. It shouldn’t, therefore, mean that the new devices will lose streaming services – they might even gain more.
Lowpass also claims that the new operating system is codenamed Vega, and that “most of the OS development is already done”. It is based on a “flavour of Linux”, much like the operating system that graces Roku streaming devices.
Vega has reportedly been worked on for the last six years and is being seen (internally, at least) as a rival to Android andiOS. When it’s ready to roll out, which could be as early as next year, it will then likely be used on all Amazon devices, including Echo Show assistants.
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We suspect that the new system will only be used on new devices going forward. We can’t imagine Amazon wanting to replace the OS in every legacy Fire TV and Echo Show being used around the world already. It could cause massive issues, including compatibility with some of thestreaming servicesand paid-for apps you might have already.
And, it’s worth remembering that the main beneficiary of the change (at least to begin with) will be Amazon itself. We doubt your experience will be any better or worse. So, if you’re currently in the market for a new streaming device, you don’t need to worry whether a new Amazon Fire TV Stick will be defunct in the near future.
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