Just two weeks ago, the Android distribution numbers for August were released without Android 9 Pie being represented in the figures. To show up in the chart, a particular Android build still must appear in at least .1% of handsets visiting the Google Play Store over a seven day period. Today, the September figures were released and are based on data garnered by Google over the seven days ended September 12th. And Android Pie is still MIA.

This isn't surprising when you consider that the four Pixel handsets and the Essential Phone are the only Android powered devices running a stable version of Android 9 Pie. And at the top of the leader board remains Android 7 Nougat. Combined, Android 7.0 and Android 7.1 have the same exact 30.8% share of active Android devices that they held two weeks ago. Android 6.0 Marshmallow is next with the exact same 22.7% slice of the Android Pie Cake, followed by the 19.2% owned by Android 5 Lollipop (consisting of Android 5.0 and Android 5.1). And yes, Android 8 Oreo (which includes Android 8.0 and Android 8.1) also has the same share of active Android devices that it owned two weeks ago at 14.6%.

Detect a pattern yet? The numbers that we passed along to you at the end of August remain exactly the same two weeks later. That includes the 4.4% share earned by Android 4.4 KitKat, the 3.5% of active Android devices running JellyBean (4.1.x-4.1.3) and the .3% still using Ice Cream Sandwich (4.0.3-4.0.4) and Gingerbread (2.3.3-2.37).

What this proves is that there really was no reason for Google to release the September distribution figures just two weeks after posting the August report.