The Recovery Changelog 0.5: Found a less dangerous Tenna Virus on this build. All builds that were 0.5+ needed a IR camera and a OrsayPC Remote (or The Overheated SMART Mouse on 0.5 - 0.9), on final release included with the Boot USB/CD. 0.6: New generation OrsayPC remote, shutdown 0.6.1: Now can possibly overheat. New OrsayPC 3.0 Remote 0.6.2: Broken Search bar in Samsung Apps, and a possibility that the now gltching power button will show the overheated message. Right now overheating will cause worse sound than before, for some reason 0.6.3: Just some general fixes, some changes on icons, etc. 0.6.4: Fixed the overheating thing so instead of saying Your TV <insert overheat> it says your PC is overheating Added picture test 0.6.5: Just some fixes and improvements. 0.7: Biggest Update Yet: Samsung Apps works, Apps scratch studio, working apps and App Template 0.8: Added a search function for YouTube so that watching videos is actually possible, only Super Idol works for now. There is also a 10% chance that it will overheat after trying to watch the video for a while. 0.8.1 made it so that the start button closes the start menu when its opened and added a new video 0.8.2: Made it so you can only have 1 app open at any given moment. Also made it so that closing the "google now" menu doesn't close the app you're using. Other minor improvements also present. 0.9 Tenna Virus is back, now as an app on the samsung store Meteonews is added 0.10: Added Netflix + minor visual improvements
Teaching them a lesson that v0.10≠v0.1 and that v0.10 comes after v0.9 and not v1.0 Explanation from Google AI: People sometimes mistake an update from version 0.9 to 1.0 as a minor update because they incorrectly apply decimal numbering rules to version numbers, rather than using standard semantic versioning or version control principles. Here is a breakdown of why this confusion happens: Misapplication of Decimal Rules: In a decimal system, 0.9 is followed by 0.10, and 0.10 is a smaller number than 1.0. People mistakenly view 1.0 in the same way they would the number one, thinking 0.10 (ten hundredths) comes before it, and that 0.9 (nine tenths) is only slightly smaller than 1.0 (one whole). Version Numbers as Labels: Version numbers are treated as a series of individual numbers or labels separated by periods, not a single mathematical decimal number. In versioning: The first number represents the major version (e.g., 0 or 1). The second number represents the minor version (e.g., 9 or 10). The third number represents the patch version (e.g., 0, 1, etc., as in 1.0.1). Semantic Meaning of the Change: Moving from version 0.9 to 1.0 actually signifies a significant milestone: the jump from the 0.x pre-release/development phase to the first stable, official release (1.0). This is a major semantic change, not a minor one like a bug fix. In the correct versioning convention, 0.9 is followed by 0.10 (a minor update within the 0.x series), and 0.10 is followed by 0.11, and so on. The version 1.0 represents the first major, stable release of the software. Also I’m not a Stranger Things fan, I just found this image off the internet