Updating apps on
your mobile device isn't just a matter of a few seconds anymore; with apps
(games, especially) steadily rising in size, a larger set of updates can easily
grow into gigabytes of data and many minutes of downloading.
Google addressed
the issue earlier this year by switching to a new compression algorithm, which
the company says reduced the size of app updates by 47 percent on average.
Now, the company has
made even bigger progress by using an app updating technique called File-by-File patching which makes app
updates 65 percent smaller on average compared with the full app.
According to
Google, the overall data savings will add up to 6 petabytes per day, making the
internet that much less clogged for all of us.
For a detailed
overview of how File-by-File patching works, see Google's blog post, or go to
the project's Github page.
The most
interesting bit for the majority of us are the real-world examples which show
how much this technique can reduce the size of an app update. For example, an
update to Google Maps was previously 17.5MB; now, with File-by-File patching
applied, only 9.6MB.
Android developers
don't need to do anything for File-by-File patching to be applied to their
apps. But for now, Google is limiting the new patching technology due to hardware limitations on older phones,
as the new tech requires more processing power, to auto-updates, or updates
that happen in the background, usually at night.
As phones get more and more powerful, this is
likely to change in the future.
Thanks for visiting
Catch me on all social media platforms on
Catch me on all social media platforms on
@PresenterAli
See you soon
0 comments:
Post a Comment