Android 5.1.1 Lollipop Rollout Begins With Factory Image, Source Code
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By Ketan Pratap | Updated: 22 April 2015 13:20 IST
Android 5.1.1 Lollipop has begun rolling out, starting with Google
publishing the factory image for the Nexus Player, the firm's streaming
set-top box. The company has also published the updated source code.
While
there is no information for over-the-air (OTA) update as yet, users can
manually download and flash the zip update file for the Nexus Player
from Google's Nexus Factory Images page. The new
updated build of Android 5.1.1 comes with build number LMY47V. To
recall, the Nexus Player was unveiled last year. It has been built by
Asus in partnership with Google and was the first Android TV device.
The
Android Open Source Project (AOSP) has been updated with the Android
5.1.1 source code (build LMY47V), tipping that the release should start
rolling out to Nexus users soon.
As of now, there is no
information about the changelog of the new incremental update; though
Android 5.1.1 is primarily anticipated to bring a fix for the memory
leak issue, a bug that plagued Android 5.0 Lollipop users and even
haunted some users on Android 5.1 Lollipop.
Android Police however
points to a developer changelog for Android 5.1.1 source code that has
been shared, with a total of 34 commits. The publication notes the
majority of the commits are either changes to core OS functions, or for
media decoding/ handling and telephony. The biggest appear to be a fix
for a camera timeout issue on the Nexus 5 and Nexus 6, a fix/
improvement for a recent remote pass through feature on Chromecast, apart
from fixes for security issues.
To recall, the "Memory leak still
present on Android 5.1" issue was reported on the AOSP issue tracker by
some users in March and was thereafter marked as fixed internally by
Google. However, at that point, no time-frame for release was provided
by the company.
The memory leak issue in Android 5.0 Lollipop was
first reported back in November and only after the release of Android
5.0.1 update in early December did a Google project member in
late-December mark the issue for 'Future Release'. Considering that some
users who recently updated to Android 5.1 Lollipop are still reporting
the issue, an update is still required to fix it. We can now expect the
incremental update Android 5.1.1 to be released in the coming days or
weeks and bring a fix for the issue.