Google is looking to standardize its Android 3.0 mobile operating system and may also be looking to standardize Android with the ARM architecture products available in many smartphones and tablets.
By standardizing Android 3.0 Honeycomb, Google will be looking to eliminate most of the drawbacks of the OS, says Digi including a buggy UI and lack of native apps.
While there are over ... [ read the full article ]
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Quote:Google recently announced it would not be releasing the Android 3.0 open source code
Isn't it based on Linux? Isn't it a requirement for linux distros to release the source code?
All well, it looks like Google is becoming another Apple...not sure what I will do about my next phone...
Microsoft = Can't even copy and paste
Apple = Hate their own customers to the point of holding back flash
Symbian = The only thing that Nokia does that is worse than windows mobile
RIM = Closed source and over controlling...but still better than the other options...if only they would make a device with good specs.
I might just hold off until phones are powerful enough to run a real Linux distro.
Quote:Google recently announced it would not be releasing the Android 3.0 open source code
Isn't it based on Linux? Isn't it a requirement for linux distros to release the source code?
All well, it looks like Google is becoming another Apple...not sure what I will do about my next phone...
Microsoft = Can't even copy and paste
Apple = Hate their own customers to the point of holding back flash
Symbian = The only thing that Nokia does that is worse than windows mobile
RIM = Closed source and over controlling...but still better than the other options...if only they would make a device with good specs.
I might just hold off until phones are powerful enough to run a real Linux distro.
How about one that calls people? Since when are the requirements for a phone "Needs Wi-Fi, 3G, completely integrated into the entire internet, plays 1080p movies, dual core processors, and 'I need to be able to write my own apps for it'?"
Not sayin' that's what you said, but I think it's funny that that's what phones are now compared to 5 years ago.
This is the first step towards combating fragmentation across their platform.
There are still people on 1.5. Some may see this move as a bad thing but coming from someone with an Android that takes 30 seconds to 1 minute to load a web page I'm glad they're making this move. I know my hardware is a limitation, but the newer versions of Android that I've been denied run more efficiently and would benefit someone like me on older hardware.
My phone lost update support 8 months after it's release and I've had to rely on the homebrew ROM support since then.
Fragmentation is the reason I was planning to switch to Windows Phone 7.