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crDroid is a customized fork of Android based on LineageOS. It has offered unofficial releases of Android 10, 11, 12.1, 13, 14, and 15 Custom ROMs. The crDroid website provides a list of supported devices along with the date of the latest release for each. [2]
Based on LineageOS: Baidu Yi: Baidu, Inc. 2015: Kernel only: Unknown: 4 (?) 2011 Discontinued in March 2015 CyanogenMod: CyanogenMod Open-Source Community, Cyanogen Inc: 2016: Yes: 14.1 Nightly: 7.1.1: 2009 571 [33] CyanogenMod's official successor is LineageOS: DivestOS [34] Tavi (SkewedZeppelin) 2024 Yes 20 13 2014 178 [35] Soft fork of ...
In December 2016, the CyanogenMod developer group forked and re-branded the CyanogenMod code into a new project named LineageOS, which is built on top of CyanogenMod versions 13 and 14.1 [71] and uses the name LineageOS for subsequent releases. [72] This project is supported by the community-operated LineageOS Project. [73]
Like CyanogenMod, the LineageOS project is developed by many device-specific maintainers and uses Gerrit for its code review process. It also retained the old versioning format, where the major version number corresponds to the place in the alphabet of the first letter of the codename (and of the commercial name for Android versions prior to 10 ...
DivestOS was an open source, Android operating system.It was a soft fork of LineageOS that aimed to increase security and privacy with support for end-of-life devices. [4] It removed many proprietary blobs and pre-installed open source apps.
/e/ (also known as /e/ OS and /e/OS, formerly Eelo) is a fork of LineageOS, [4] [5] an Android-based mobile operating system, and associated online services. [6] /e/ is presented as privacy software that does not contain proprietary Google apps or services, [7] and challenges the public to "find any parts of the system or default applications that are still leaking data to Google."
iodéOS is presented as a privacy-oriented fork of LineageOS combined with MicroG and a firewall. [2] From 2020 through November 2022, IodéOS was closed source and included proprietary apps. In November 2022, the company announced it was releasing version 3.3 as "open source" with options for uninstalling default apps.
New features or bug fix changes made by contributors are submitted using Google's source code review system, Gerrit. [15] Contributions may be tested by anyone, voted up or down by registered users, and ultimately accepted into the code by AOKP developers. In early 2020 AOKP Developers posted a blog outlining parity with LineageOS upstream.