When customers compare interactive flat panels, Android version is often one of the first parameters they look at.
Android 11, 13, 14, even 16 — the numbers can feel overwhelming. And naturally, many buyers ask:
“Is a higher Android version always better?”
At Qtenboard, we get this question almost every week.
The short answer is simple:
Android versions are not about being higher — they’re about being right.
That’s exactly why Qtenboard now standardizes on Android 14 across our interactive flat panels, delivering the latest Android experience within a mature, stable, and fully validated system architecture.
In this article, we’ll explain:
Let’s break it down in a clear, honest, and practical way.
In smartphones, Android upgrades are often fast and frequent.
But interactive flat panels are not phones.
They are:
That changes everything.
For interactive flat panels, Android version affects:
However, the version number alone does not guarantee better performance.
What really matters is whether the Android system has been:
This is where many misunderstandings begin.
Today, you may see interactive flat panels advertised with:
On paper, they all sound impressive.
In reality, they serve very different purposes.
Here’s how Qtenboard views them:
| Android Version | Typical Use Case | Qtenboard Position |
|---|---|---|
| Android 11 | Legacy projects, system compatibility | Supported on request |
| Android 13 | Transitional projects | Supported for specific needs |
| Android 14 | Modern, stable, mass deployment | Standard configuration |
| Android 16 | Early-stage evaluation | Pilot only, not mass deployment |
This leads us to the core decision Qtenboard has made.
At Qtenboard, we don’t adopt Android versions for marketing headlines.
We adopt them only after:
Within our validated hardware and software ecosystem, Android 14 has proven to be stable, reliable, and suitable for long-term commercial use.
That’s why today:
Android 14 is not an experiment at Qtenboard — it is a production-ready standard.
Android 14 delivers meaningful improvements where it actually matters:
At the same time, it avoids the risks that come with rushing early-stage versions into mass production.
In other words:
Modern enough for today
Stable enough for tomorrow
Here’s something many suppliers won’t tell you:
Android performance is defined by hardware, not labels.
The Android version your panel runs depends heavily on:
You can “install” a higher Android version, but that doesn’t mean:
At Qtenboard, Android 14 is paired with validated mainboard platforms, tested specifically for interactive flat panels — not consumer TVs or tablets.
This is a key difference between a manufacturer and a simple assembler.
Another critical topic customers often ask about is Google services.
This is where EDLA certification comes in.
EDLA (Enterprise Device Licensing Agreement) allows interactive flat panels to:
Qtenboard’s Android 14 platform is EDLA certified, which means:
This certification is not automatic.
It requires:
For customers, this translates to peace of mind.
Some suppliers promote very high Android versions to stand out in price lists.
But here’s the truth:
That’s why experienced buyers don’t ask:
“What’s the highest Android version?”
They ask:
“Which Android version will still be stable three years from now?”
This mindset is exactly why Android 14 has become the industry’s mainstream choice.
This is where Qtenboard’s role as a manufacturer really matters.
Qtenboard operates:
Every interactive flat panel running Android 14 goes through:
Android 14 at Qtenboard is not a “one-time install”.
It is part of a system that supports:
This is how Android 14 becomes a stable foundation, not just a feature.
Here’s a simple, honest guideline:
For most education and enterprise customers worldwide, Android 14 is the safest and smartest choice.
And that’s exactly why Qtenboard made it the standard.
Choosing Android 14 is not about staying conservative.
It’s about being responsible.
By standardizing on Android 14, Qtenboard delivers:
In short:
Android 14 at Qtenboard is not about chasing numbers — it’s about delivering confidence.