#Ubuntu jar of beans for android
For Android 11 Red Velvet Cake and Android 12 Snow Cone, Google continued the tradition by releasing "statues" as 3D objects viewable online. Google stopped making physical statues after Android 10 Queen Cake, which also was the first release that no longer used dessert theme names externally. The statues were on the lawn in front of Building 44, where the Android development team worked until August 2014. Ī few days before each named operating system was unveiled, Google used to unveil a lawn statue representing that version's codename. , however, they were used internally and even referenced on 11 and 12’s statues. Google stopped using dessert names as marketing names in 2019 with Android 10 Queen Cake. Since then, further releases of Android were named after desserts or sweet treats, with names being chosen in alphabetical order, although sometimes the same name was applied to multiple versions. When codenames became public with version 1.5, they started to follow alphabetical order, beginning with "C" (apparently since the two previous public releases have been 'skipped' in this scheme). Eventually, this plan was discontinued, and version 1.0 did not have a codename, but version 1.1 got the internal codename "Petit Four", which launched the custom of naming Android releases after desserts.
There was initially a plan to use famous robot names in alphabetical order, and some early interim revisions have been tagged " Astro Boy" and " Bender".
Versions 1.0 and 1.1 did not have codenames following this scheme. The first publicly codenamed version of Android was "Cupcake" which was released on April 27, 2009. Google's Android is the fastest selling mobile operating system as of late 2010 and was developed as a partnership with the Open Handset Alliance, with version 1.0 being released on September 23, 2008. Īndroid dog model, Puppy by Eero Aarnio, 2008. The area is open to Google employees and their guests, and visitors are encouraged to take photos.Īt least up to 2013's KitKat, all the sculptures were made by a company named Themendous, earlier called "Custom Creations". These statues were originally located in front of Building 44, where the Android development team had its offices, before being moved to their present location a few blocks away next to the Google Visitor Center Beta. Google used to commission a statue for each new Android version, a tradition that ended in 2019.
#Ubuntu jar of beans code
They are based on the code names for versions of Google's Android mobile operating system, which used to be named after desserts and sweet treats.
#Ubuntu jar of beans series
The Android lawn statues are a series of large foam statues near the Googleplex ( Google's headquarters) in Mountain View, California, currently located at 1981 Landings Drive.