In August 2016, media outlets reported on a mysterious
source code repository published on
GitHub, revealing that
Google was developing a new operating system named Fuchsia. No official announcement was made, but inspection of the code suggested its capability to run on various devices, including "dash infotainment" systems for cars, embedded devices like
traffic lights,
digital watches,
smartphones,
tablets, and
PCs. Its architecture differs entirely from the
Linux-based Android and ChromeOS due in part to its unique Zircon kernel, formerly named Magenta. In May 2017,
Ars Technica wrote about Fuchsia's new
user interface, an upgrade from its
command-line interface at its first reveal in August. A developer wrote that Fuchsia "isn't a toy thing, it's not a
20% Project, it's not a dumping ground of a dead thing that we don't care about anymore". Though users could test Fuchsia, nothing "works", because "it's all a bunch of placeholder interfaces that don't do anything". They found multiple similarities between Fuchsia's interface and Android, including a Recent Apps screen, a Settings menu, and a split-screen view for viewing multiple apps at once. Multiple media outlets wrote about the project's seemingly close ties to Android, with some speculating that Fuchsia might be an effort to "re-do" or replace Android in a way that fixes its problems. This was implemented successfully by
Ars Technica, where experts were impressed with the progress, noting that things were then working, and were especially pleased by the hardware support and multiple mouse pointers. A Fuchsia device was added to the Android ecosystem in January 2019 via the
Android Open Source Project (AOSP). Google talked about Fuchsia at
Google I/O 2019.
Hiroshi Lockheimer, Senior Vice President of Chrome and Android, described it as one of Google's experiments around new operating system concepts. On July 1, 2019, Google announced the official website of the development project with source code and documentation. including making
mailing lists public, introducing a governance model, publishing a roadmap, and using a public
issue tracker. In May 2021, Google employees confirmed that Fuchsia had been deployed in the consumer market for the first time, within a software update to the first-generation
Google Nest Hub that replaces its existing
Chromecast-based software. The update contains no user-facing changes to the device's software or user interface. After the initial wave of updates to preview devices, the update was rolled out to all Nest Hub devices in August 2021. Around February 21, 2022, the Chrome browser was fully working on Fuchsia. In January 2023, Google announced layoffs across the company with 16% of Fuchsia employees being impacted. In May 2023, Google began rolling out a Fuchsia-based update to the second-generation
Google Nest Hub. ==Overview==