this post was submitted on 27 Mar 2025
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It's important to note that this is them moving in-development branches/features "behind closed doors", not making Android closed source. Whenever a feature is ready they then merge it publicly. I know this community tends to be filled with purists, many of whom are well informed and reasoned, but I'm actually totally fine with this change. This kind of structure isn't crazy uncommon, and I imagine it's mainly an effort to stop tech journalists analysing random in-progress features for an article. Personally, I wouldn't want to develop code with that kind of pressure.
Why would you want people to test your software on all sorts of random hardware when you could just pay people to test it on a smaller scale!
Would you really want everyone in the world looking at every end of day commit before you've refactored it into something vaguely passable?
When that code is used on devices all over the world for many very important tasks, yes.
Why do you feel that Vs when merges happen?