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I dont get it.. What is up with update delay?????

The note 3 is newer then the galaxy s4 by 5 months. Why is the s4 getting 4.4.2 before note 3?
I am with at&t..

A friend of mine has a new Galaxy S4 and has Consumer Cellular as a provider, which uses AT&T's network. He got the KitKat upgrade a few days ago and he likes it. I have a Note 3 and had an on-line chat with both Verizon, my provider, and Samsung last week. Verizon said they have not heard from Samsung on the update to KitKat and Samsung said they won't provide any idea on when the upgrade will be available to Verizon as they don't want to put out false information. Both answers were less than acceptable. Sprint and AT&T have the update and why Verizon seems to be in the dark I don't know.
 
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Samsung said they won't provide any idea on when the upgrade will be available to Verizon as they don't want to put out false information. Both answers were less than acceptable.
Whether you accept them or not, that's how it is in the software development business. When you have a firm date by which the software is ready to be released, that date is "now" and you release it. Before that you don't know if fixing that last little bug will take 5 minutes or 5 weeks.

Or are you saying that they should give a firm release date even if they can't meet it? Or if they have to release a buggy ROM?
 
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...and HTC are now having kit kat issues with the One....its been pulled.

Maybe I won't bother looking for the update for a bit!

Yes I am holding off on Kit Kat. I have just turned off my phone notifying me about the update OTA (wouldn't work with a rooted phone and a custom recovery anyway - be nice if it would work: no resetting up after a manual Odin flash!). I've got the new firmware, CF rooting file and new version of my chosen recovery all ready and waiting, but going from Jelly Bean to KitKat means a new bootloader and no chance of resorting a Nandroid should I A) not like it or B) get "issues".
 
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Whether you accept them or not, that's how it is in the software development business. When you have a firm date by which the software is ready to be released, that date is "now" and you release it. Before that you don't know if fixing that last little bug will take 5 minutes or 5 weeks.

Or are you saying that they should give a firm release date even if they can't meet it? Or if they have to release a buggy ROM?

Having been a software developer for AT&T Bell Labs/Lucent Technologies, I know something about schedules and updates. There is no way Samsung does not have a schedule on its releases, so there is no way they are unable to give some idea on when a particular update will be released to a particular provider. The KitKat update has been released to Sprint and AT&T, so they can't tell me they have no idea when it will be released to Verizon customers. No word on the update for my wife's Galaxy S4 yet, either.
 
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Having been a software developer for AT&T Bell Labs/Lucent Technologies, I know something about schedules and updates. There is no way Samsung does not have a schedule on its releases, so there is no way they are unable to give some idea on when a particular update will be released to a particular provider. The KitKat update has been released to Sprint and AT&T, so they can't tell me they have no idea when it will be released to Verizon customers. No word on the update for my wife's Galaxy S4 yet, either.

Surely once the firmware is given to carriers it is out of Samsung's hands? It is up to the carrier if and when their users get it.
 
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Everyone that is worried about not having received the Kitkat update yet, be glad. There is a bug on the Kitkat update, that is causing excessive battery drain. Apparently, it has some sort of connection to the camera/qualcomm processor combination. Chris Chavez had mentioned it on the Phandroid podcast.

Initially, my update on Sprint was fine, but I started experiencing the battery drain issue yesterday, so hopefully Google releases their update to all the manufacturers (Samsung, in our case) soon, and it doesn't take too long for the carriers to pass it through also.

For those that are unbranded, but still haven't received the Kitkat update, definitely be thankful because a carrier won't delay the update even longer.

BTW, another thing I thought about (for those unbranded)...if you're really in such a rush to get Kitkat, I'd also try checking through Kies (actually connecting, not using wireless connection). I remember, when I had my international Note 2, that was the only way I actually received an update that had been released (but never showed up as an OTA update). Otherwise, if you don't need it right now, I'd highly suggest waiting until Google releases the revision to 4.4.2 (or update to 4.4.3).
 
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