Recently Google has updated the Android  Users figures on its developer website, which brings with it some good  news. OS Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich user base has grown up to 7.1  percent, up from the 2.9 percent back on April and the 1 percent in  January.
It  is still small amount compared to the user base of Android 2.3  Gingerbread, which runs on a staggering 65 percent of the Android  devices out there.
The  following stacked line graph provides a history of the relative number  of active Android devices running different versions of the Android  platform. It also provides a valuable perspective of how many devices  your application is compatible with, based on the platform version.
Notice  that the platform versions are stacked on top of each other with the  oldest active version at the top. This format indicates the total  percent of active devices that are compatible with a given version of  Android. For example, if you develop your application for the version  that is at the very top of the chart, then your application is  compatible with 100% of active devices (and all future versions),  because all Android APIs are forward compatible. Or, if you develop your  application for a version lower on the chart, then it is currently  compatible with the percentage of devices indicated on the y-axis, where  the line for that version meets the y-axis on the right.
Each  dataset in the timeline is based on the number of Android devices that  accessed Google Play within a 14-day period ending on the date indicated  on the x-axis.
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