Cyanogen will reportedly stop supporting Cyanogen OS on December 31
Cyanogen, the company behind the popular
custom Android fork Cyanogen OS has announced it is shutting down all
services and nightly builds on December 31. The open source project and source
code will remain available for anyone who wants to develop on top of it, but
owners of devices that run the Cyanogen OS, including the OnePlus One and
Lenovo ZUK Z1, won't get further updates.
The company’s
version of Android got some traction early on, securing over $100-million
in funding, and its CEO made no secret of his ambition to "take Android
away from Google" with a more open version of the OS. They even found an
ally in Microsoft replacing Google’s default services with out of the box
access to Office, Skype, OneDrive, OneNote, Outlook, and Bing. But ultimately
they failed in convincing phone makers to use CyanogenMod and eventually lost
One Plus as their biggest hardware partner.
The community of
developers maintaining the open-source CyanogenMod ROM responded to the
shutdown saying they’ll focus their efforts on a new open-source Android
project called Lineage. They
insist this is more than just a rebranding effort but “a return to the
grassroots community effort that used to define CM while maintaining the
professional quality and reliability you have come to expect.”
Signs of
Cyanogens’s troubles have been surfacing over the last few months, with the
firm’s decision to lay off around 20 percent of its
workforce and a
supposed shift to apps (which was later denied), as well as the continued
internal conflicts between the founders, executives and development team.
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