Google
has officially unveiled Android, a mobile
software platform that is generally referred to as the Google Phone.
An early version of a software development kit is slated for release by next
week. The first phones powered by the software are expected to hit the market in
the second half of next year.
Android bundles an operating system, middleware, user interface and
applications. The platform will be made available under an open source licence.
Phones currently rely on proprietary software such as the Symbian operating
system and Windows Mobile. Vendors also are increasingly experimenting with
Linux.
The multitude of platforms, however, has caused the market to fragment. Users
ordering games or ring-tones, for instance, need to know the model of their
phones.
Android aims to create a common platform for the mobile phone similar to the
PC, allowing developers to craft applications without interference from device
makers or operators.
Those operators and device makers, however, will still be able to customise
the platform to add features and their corporate brand.
The platform was developed through the Open Handset Alliance, a new industry
body that includes technology and mobile providers as well as operators, such as
T-Mobile, Motorola and Texas Instruments. Nokia, the majority shareholder of
Symbian, is not part of the alliance.
"This partnership will help unleash the potential of mobile technology for
billions of users around the world," said Google chief executive Eric Schmidt.
"A fresh approach to fostering innovation in the mobile industry will help
shape a new computing environment that will change the way people access and
share information in the future."
Google has been at the
centre
of mobile rumours ever since the company acquired Android, a company set up
by mobile pioneer Andy Rubin.
Fed by an
image
of an early mock-up, speculation suggested that Google was developing a
mobile device that would rival Apple's iPhone and Nokia phones.
"Today's announcement is more ambitious than any single 'Google Phone' that
the press has been speculating about over the past few weeks. Our vision is that
the powerful platform we're unveiling will power thousands of different phone
models," said Schmidt.
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