Timing really is everything. Just as Samsung finally uplifts Galaxy phones with its long-awaited One UI 8.5 upgrade, Apple releases iOS 26.5 . Both on the same day. But while Apple’s update followed its usual slick schedule, Galaxy owners have now been waiting five months since the initial One UI 8.5 beta.

One UI 8.5 and iOS 26.5 both have security at their core. Samsung says this release “safeguards more settings than before, adding an extra layer of protection.” That includes Theft Protection, Failed Authentication Lock and Identity Check. Apple’s headline update is encrypting RCS, finally securing cross-platform texts.

Apple controls its ecosystem end-to-end. Its annual OS upgrades and intervening updates follow an almost boring routine. Leakers even predict release dates based on which day of which month Apple typically drops point releases. Meanwhile, Samsung watchers are left completely in the dark.

While Samsung takes the flak for this, it says more about Android than its largest OEM. It’s proving to be impossible for any device maker to match Google’s slick Pixel release schedule, notwithstanding the quality issues now plaguing Google phones. Android was not designed to accommodate one OEM controlling software and hardware competing with a raft of other OEMs that do not.

“Now that One UI 8.5 is rolling out as a stable update,” 9to5Google says, "a rollout that is expanding widely to Galaxy devices across the globe – we’re just wondering why this one took so long. Samsung had this update in beta for five months."

The other twist in this current tale of two operating systems is the wider Google dominance across its quasi-open-source operating system. Gemini dominates and leaves no room for Bixby or other AI engines to compete. And Samsung Messages has just been retired in favor of Google Messages, now Android’s default.

May 11 has turned out to be a red-letter-day for a number of reasons. The securing of RCS messaging that prompted sync’d announcements from Google and Apple, relief for Galaxy S25 and S24 owners catching up with Galaxy S26, and Pixel innovations finally making their way to Samsung.

But the fact that Apple and Samsung dropped major releases the same day perfectly illustrates the disconnect separating the world’s dominant makers of flagship smartphones. And this is perhaps the most notable thing of all.