Google’s mobile phone has been dubbed Android and is actually an Open Source platform with an operating system and applications.
After months of speculation about the "Gphone", the search engine giant has now released tangible details of the project. Instead of a feature-loaded mobile phone the mobile project is an operating system platform called Android, which theOpen Handset Alliance project will be promoting. "Android is more significant and ambitious than a single phone", says Andy Rubin, Google’s Director for Mobile Platforms inhis blog.
Android is Google’s term for a Linux operating system, desktop and applications. Google purchases the software basis in August 2007 in the form of Andy Rubin’s company. Now, Andy Rubin heads the Mobile Platforms team in Google’s development department and has published aYoutube video introducing the Gphone aka Android along with the members of the project team. Rubin writes "We have developed Android in cooperation with the Open Handset Alliance, which consists of more than 30 technology and mobile leaders including Motorola, Qualcomm, HTC and T-Mobile."
Rubin goes on to describe Android as the "first truly open and comprehensive platform for mobile devices" promising "all of the software to run a mobile phone, but without the proprietary obstacles that have hindered mobile innovation." Google hopes to achieve faster development cycles and more freedom of choice thanks to the open platform. Google refers to Android as an important part of its strategy to provide information on a platform-independent basis.
Google is looking to release a Software Development Kit (SDK) for developers in about a week’s time. Consumer devices based on Android are due for release in the second half of 2008. And Sun boss Jonathan Schwartz has already announced hissupport. Sun will be seeking to provide a matchin developer environment for Android on the basis of Sun’s Netbeans Java developer tools.
This announcement sees Google join the race to deliver a Linux-based mobile platform and to find other enterprises to back the project up. UK-based processor manufacturer ARM is working on a similar project with six partners including Montavista, an embedded Linux system vendor. Competitor Intel announced a Linux operating system on the basis of Ubuntu for x86-based mini PCs dubbed Mobile Internet Devices MID in April 2007.
At the Google I/O developer conference in San Francisco on May 27, Google's senior director for mobile platforms Andy Rubin made it public that many new Google phones are expected to appear by end of 2009.
Graphics specialist NVIDIA has unleashed the Android mobile platform on its Tegra computer-on-a-chip series.
Open source, Linux-based mobile operating system Android became the second most popular mobile OS for the first quarter of 2010.
Andy Rubin confirms that 2.2 is open-sourced and ready for OEMs and consumers.
Google's software for mobile communication, Android, is scheduled for release in November along with the Dream ''GPhone."
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