Skip to main content

Android is the most stable mobile OS, says new report

android stable mobile os says new report kitkat
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Android has been declared as the most stable mobile operating system in a new report from Crittercism, a company specialising in app analysis and management. The firm looked at statistics generated by more than a billion iOS and Android applications, finding that Android KitKat’s 0.7 percent crash rate was some way below the 1.6 percent crash rate detected on iOS 7.1.

The good news for Apple is that the bugs are slowly being squashed — iOS 6 had a crash rate of 2.5 percent while iOS 7.0 registered a rate of 2.1 percent. KitKat was the best performer for Android along with Jelly Bean and Ice Cream Sandwich, while the buggiest version was Gingerbread (1.7 percent).

“There are a 100 million factors that affect the performance of a mobile app,” Crittercism CTO Rob Kwok explained to TechCrunch. “As new mobile platforms such as wearables grow in adoption, the challenge to provide a consistent, high-quality experience to users will be even more difficult and mobile teams need purpose-built solutions to manage overall app performance.”

There are plenty of other interesting bits of information in the report: Tablet apps crash more often than smartphone ones, for example, while games are the worst offenders with a crash rate of 4.4 percent. Due to network stability and other factors, patterns vary based on geographical region — apps run from Canada were found to crash least often.

Crittercism found that the average app now relies on six different cloud services (for facilities such as remote storage, third-party logins and analytics). Overall, nearly half of all apps crash more than 1 percent of the time, while almost a third half a crash rate above 2 percent.

Editors' Recommendations

David Nield
Dave is a freelance journalist from Manchester in the north-west of England. He's been writing about technology since the…
Here’s how iOS 18 could change the way you use your iPhone
The lock screen on the Apple iPhone 15 Plus.

It seems the long-overdue Siri overhaul will finally arrive at WWDC in just over a week from now, and the digital assistant will embrace AI trickery in all its forms. According to Bloomberg, Apple’s planned upgrades for Siri will deeply integrate with on-device functions at the OS level and with the installed apps, too.

“The new system will allow Siri to take command of all the features within apps for the first time,” the report says. The most notable capability is that Siri will only require voice prompts to interact with apps, thanks to a major change in the AI architecture powering it and putting large language models in command, just the way Gemini or ChatGPT draw their own skills from such models.

Read more
The Spotify Android app just got an odd design change
A close-up of the Spotify app icon.

There's a good chance you use Spotify for your music streaming and podcast listening. There's also a good chance you use the Spotify app on your Android phone. If so, you'll soon notice that the app looks a bit different than usual.

How so? The app icon no longer has its distinctive black background. Gasp.

Read more
iOS 18 may give Siri the upgrade we’ve been waiting for
Hey Siri

Apple isn’t immune from the AI craze sweeping the rest of the industry. Following the likes of Google with Gemini Nano, Apple is set to roll out AI upgrades to the iPhone with iOS 18. Code-named “Project Graymatter,” the iOS 18 update will bring a variety of AI-powered enhancements to the iPhone and Siri in particular.

According to AppleInsider, the features are being tested in advance of Apple's Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC), and one of the biggest is called “Graymatter Catch Up.” The feature is tied to Siri, Apple’s voice assistant, which will now allow users to request and receive an AI overview of the most recent notifications.

Read more