MobileNews

Nest Hub Max may soon run Fuchsia as Google ramps up internal testing

The Nest Hub Max may soon be switched to Fuchsia — Google’s homegrown operating system — as internal testing ramps up.

Earlier this year, Google took the bold step of updating existing 1st-gen Nest Hub smart displays from their Linux-based Cast OS to the company’s long-in-development Fuchsia operating system. This marked the official debut of the OS, though it was done largely without fanfare, if only to prove a point that Fuchsia could replace Linux under the hood on some devices without most people noticing. The launch wasn’t without its issues, but Google ultimately got things under control for Nest Hub owners.

Ahead of that debut, we reported that Google had begun “dogfood” testing Fuchsia on the Nest Hub. The term “dogfood” comes from the phrase “eating your own dog food,” which essentially means “prove to customers that your product is good by using it yourself.” Within Google, dogfood is typically the last step of internal testing for a product before members of the public get their hands on it.

Before dogfood, there are two other phases of testing, teamfood and fishfood, both of which involve testing with smaller groups of Googlers. Dogfood, on the other hand, is typically a much larger test, involving Google employees who are not involved with a particular project’s development.

According to a comment on a Fuchsia code change, Google has begun dogfood testing the Fuchsia operating system on the Nest Hub Max — codenamed “Sherlock.” Google has also confirmed to 9to5Google that this test has indeed begun.

This cherrypick to f6 needs to happen before ~Sunday 12/19 else we miss out on getting needed PatternCheckFailed instances from sherlock f6 dogfood from Monday 12/20 until 1/3.

For a quick explainer of what we’re seeing here, an issue was discovered in the most recent milestone release of Fuchsia — version 6 or “f6” — which appears to prevent Nest Hub Max devices on the new OS from reporting other potential issues with the smart displays during Google’s holiday break. Here, a Googler was trying to get a fix in place and rolled out to devices before that break.

The important part here is that dogfood testing has begun, which means that the Nest Hub Max may soon be updated to run on Fuchsia, making it the second retail device with the OS. This doesn’t come as a surprise, as the Fuchsia team has been working on and with the Nest Hub Max since before its arrival.

At this point, there’s no way to know how long it will be before retail Nest Hub Max devices will be updated with Fuchsia, if at all. If things follow the pattern of the original Nest Hub, Fuchsia will be made available first to those in the Preview Program in the Google Home app.



Author: Kyle Bradshaw
Source: 9TO5Google

Related posts
AI & RoboticsNews

Microsoft brings AI to the farm and factory floor, partnering with industry giants

AI & RoboticsNews

Edge data is critical to AI — here’s how Dell is helping enterprises unlock its value

AI & RoboticsNews

Box continues to expand beyond just data sharing, with agent-driven enterprise AI studio and no-code apps

Cleantech & EV'sNews

Porsche launches three new Taycan EV models, adding more performance and range

Sign up for our Newsletter and
stay informed!