| I think the lack of public information about their future plans for the project combined with the “killed by Google” meme got smashed together here and that is actually a really common perception but also one that is completely made up out of thin air. It has been under heavy heavy development for many years now. The fact that they are now starting to talk about it publicly now is probably a sign that they are looking to move beyond just IoT in the future. For example, I know it’s coming to Android (not necessarily as a replacement but as a VM) and I know there is some plans around consolidating ChromeOS and Android as well. I expect that is also going to be another place we might see it before too long. I know they are also working on a full Linux compatibility layer called Starnix [1] as well where I believe the goal is you can just run all your Linux workloads on Fuchsia without any changes is the goal AFAIK so you can probably extrapolate from there that the end state is going to be roughly in line with anywhere Linux runs currently is a good potential fit for Fuchsia and it will come with a lot of additional security guarantees on top of it that is going to make it particularly attractive. [1] https://fuchsia.dev/fuchsia-src/concepts/components/v2/starn... |
If this were something that they were planning on using mainly for internal stuff, like for some sort of competitive advantage in data centers or something, I could understand the radio silence on future plans, but it's hard for me to imagine that's their main purpose when they're publicly putting it on stuff like the Nest Hub and Chromebooks (they didn't sell any with it afaik, but they published a guide for putting it on them). It really feels like they just don't know exactly what to do with it, and they're trying to figure that out as well. As for ChromeOS and Android, those already feel like a pretty good example of them not having a super clear initial product strategy for how they overlap (and more important, how they _don't_), so while having some sort of consolidation would make sense, it's not clear to me how Fuschia would help with that rather than just make things even murkier if they start pushing it more. I'd expect that consolidating them would start with the lower-level components rather than the UI, and my understanding is that Fuschia (as opposed to Zircon, which is the kernel) has quite a lot of UI-related stuff in it specifically with Flutter. I'm not saying you're wrong, since it sounds like you might have more relevant knowledge than me, but I can't help but wonder how much of this has really been planned in the long term rather than just been played by ear by those with decision-making power.