
The adoption rate for Android KitKat, the most recent version of Android, is still low, despite steady growth.
KItKat, which was first released last October, is now running on 8.5% of Android devices, according to Google's most recent numbers.
These numbers highlight Google's continuing struggle with Android fragmentation.
Jelly Bean, the previous version of Android released in 2012, still claims the lion's share of Android usage, with nearly 61% of devices running a version of the operating system. And Gingerbread, an operating system now more than three years old, still accounts for more than 15% of Android devices.
In contrast, Apple's iOS 7, which was released last September, has an adoption rate well over 80%.
Part of the this can be attributed to the way Google rolls out updates to Android. While Apple pushes updates to all of its users at once, Android updates are often dependent on the manufacturers and carriers, so users often have to wait to get the latest updates.
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