No Gphone, Google bets on Android
Tuesday, November 6, 2007
| Google has unveiled an ambitious strategy that will make cellphones cheaper and speed up internet surfing. |
| Google�s Director of Mobile Platforms, Andy Rubin, said in a telephonic conversation from the US that the new platform called Android should reduce the prices of today�s $500 smart phones to around $100-150 in a year or so. �If there�s ever a Gphone, it will be built on the Android platform,� he said. |
| Smart phones are cell phones that run business applications like documents, spreadsheets and presentations. |
| Android includes a new browser and Linux operating system (OS) which will compete with platforms such as Apple's OS X (Google CEO Eric Schmidt is on the board of Apple) on the iPhone, the BlackBerry OS, Microsoft's Windows Mobile, and the Palm OS. |
| While there had been widespread reports that Google would announce alliances to create its own handsets - potentially even carrying the Google brand - it instead laid out a strategy that will give it a background role. |
| The announcement however is more ambitious than any single �Google Phone� that the media has been speculating about over the past few weeks. |
| Google has partnered with 34 technology and mobile companies � under the Open Handset Alliance (OHA) � to develop Android. |
| The names include the likes of Motorola, Qualcomm, HTC and T-Mobile (but not Nokia and Microsoft). |
| The name of Bharti Airtel too has been doing the rounds, but Rubin did not want to discuss specific companies. |
| He also declined to comment on whether its India centre had any part to play in the platform�s development. |
| The Android (derived from name of the company that Google bought from Rubin in 2005) platform is �open�, which means the source code can be altered by developers for use on handsets. |
| �Open source reduces the cost of software which comprises a major chunk of the cellphone cost,� explained Rubin. Mash-up is a web application that combines data from more than one source into a single integrated tool. |
| A typical example is the use of cartographic data from Google Maps to add location information to real-estate data from Craigslist, thereby creating a new and distinct web service. |
| Meanwhile, carriers like Verizon and AT&T are worried that the open-software standards could expose users to software attacks or security breaches. Rubin does not think so. |
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