Android is a mobile phone platform based on the Linux operating system and developed by Google and the Open Handset Alliance.
The unveiling of the Android platform on 5 November 2007 was announced with the founding of the Open Handset Alliance, a consortium of 34 hardware, software and telecom companies devoted to advancing open standards for mobile devices. When released in 2008, most of the Android platform will be made available under the Apache free-software and open-source license.
With the release of the SDK, features and specifications for Android are slowly being released.
Key Features Include:
Handset layouts
The platform is adaptable to both larger, VGA, 2D graphics library, 3D graphics library based on OpenGL ES 1.0 specifications, traditional smartphone layouts.
Storage
SQLite for structured data storage
Connectivity
Android supports a wide variety of connectivity technologies including GSM, Bluetooth, EDGE, 3G, and Wi-Fi.
Messaging
Both SMS and MMS are available forms of messaging including threaded text messaging.
Web browser
WebKit
The web browser available in Android is based on the open-source WebKit application framework.
Java virtual machine
Software written in Java can be compiled into Dalvik bytecodes and executed in the Dalvik virtual machine, which is a specialized VM implementation designed for mobile device use, although not technically a standard Java Virtual Machine.
Media support
Android will support advanced audio/video/still media formats such as MPEG-4, H.264, MP3, and AAC, AMR, JPEG, PNG, GIF.
Additional hardware support
Android is fully capable of utilizing video/still cameras, touchscreens, GPS, compasses, accelerometers, and accelerated 3D graphics.
Development environment
Includes a device emulator, tools for debugging, memory and performance profiling, a plugin for the Eclipse IDE. [edit]
Android is a mobile phone platform based on the Linux operating system and developed by Go...
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Haven't built anything on this as yet but just browsing through info around the apps that are being developed and seeing the capabilities - I think Google is getting ready to own Mobile 2.0 (the mobile equivalent of web 2.0) - next generation interactive applications and mash-ups for the mobile phone
On the PC (or Mac) the experience is very uniform - similar screen size, keyboard, mouse, etc. etc. etc. This changes dramatically for the mobile phone market - sliders, flips, smart, not-so-smart, i, black, blue, etc. etc. etc. Now, I realize that if you own the OS you can attempt to make it extensible enough to get coverage for most models but this is where I feel Nokia will have the edge + the fact that they already have an ad network in place and their own OS and a head start into innovating around handsets (and subsequent apps). Still too early to tell, but don't expect a slam dunk from Google like we saw in online search