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Subject: [News] Google to unveil 'Android' phone software
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Post at 11-2-2007 22:52  Profile | Site | Blog | P.M. 
Google to unveil 'Android' phone software

Google is ready to unveil a suite of software for mobile phones based on open-source technology, backed by some of the largest wireless industry companies in the world.

The company is expected hold a press conference on Monday to unveil the project, which is expected to incorporate software from the Linux world into a mobile platform code-named "Android" that's designed to run on phones, according to sources familiar with Google's plans. A software development kit for what's being called "a complete mobile phone software stack," is believed to be in the works and will be released relatively soon thereafter, the sources said. It's not exactly clear what kind of software will come as part of that stack, but it's said to include everything you need to run a phone.

Japanese wireless carriers KDDI and NTT DoCoMo are said to be heavily involved what will be called the Open Handset Alliance, according to other sources. The rest of the more than 30 other companies involved reads like a who's-who list of the mobile computing industry, including Qualcomm, Broadcom, HTC, Intel, Samsung, Motorola, Sprint, and Texas Instruments.


Don't expect to see a Google phone, or Gphone, on store shelves anytime soon. And in such a large project with so many different players, plans and some details could still change over the weekend. It's unclear when the final version will be released. Google has repeatedly declined to talk about the Gphone or confirm the Monday event.

Persistent rumors of Google's interest in the mobile phone market have captivated Silicon Valley and the wireless industry for months. The company's interest appears to be simple: there are over a billion mobile phones in the world, and sales show no signs of slowing down.
Over time, these mobile phones are going to become more and more sophisticated, and the race to develop a truly mobile computer is wide open. Google has the engineering talent to make a concerted push into this area while keeping rivals like Microsoft at bay, and it has enough resources to force the industry to take it seriously, despite its relative lack of experience in the market.

Mobile phones are just starting to move beyond the stripped-down mobile Internet and join the party with their bigger PC cousins. When they get there, they'll need search, and they'll need applications tailored to mobile phones. Those are things Google figured out how to do a long time ago.

And when you've got practically unlimited amounts of money, finding the things you don't have is somewhat easier. Android was the name of a mobile phone software company acquired by Google in 2005 and led by Andy Rubin, the co-founder of Danger. It was never entirely clear what Android was working on, but it appears to be coming to fruition.

The open-source community appears to be contributing a lot of technology to Android. Google is expected to license Android under the Apache License, Version 2.0, according to sources.

Wind River Systems, a company that specializes in tailoring Linux for embedded devices such as network equipment and mobile phones, is likely to be a key part of the alliance, sources familiar with the effort said. The company is expected to play a role working on a Linux foundation for Google, integrating it with specific hardware, and providing support to phone companies using the software.
A Wind River representative declined to comment Friday on any Google partnership.

Wind River previously was fond mostly of its own operating system, VxWorks, but it got Linux religion in 2003, and Linux has been a top priority for Chief Executive Ken Klein.

But Linux in mobile phones has been a tough proposition for multicompany consortia over the years. Among those that have tackled the challenge are the Linux Phone Standard (Lips) Forum, the Open Source Developer Labs, the Consumer Electronics Linux Forum (CELF), and most recently, the LiMo Foundation founded in 2006.

The Google group is separate from LiMo, but the two share many members, and a connection could be beneficial. Linux-based phone software for Google could dovetail with LiMo's work, providing mobile phone software developers with a unified software foundation.

Mobile phones can't run just any software. Battery life is paramount, and therefore software must be designed to run inside a constrained environment with limited amounts of memory and processing power at its disposal. Linux appeals to phone makers because it's modular, meaning that it's relatively easy to piece together only the technology you need, and its relatively cheap to acquire the parts.

Also, phones are complicated, at least as they compare to PCs. ARM's chip designs are at the heart of almost every mobile phone in the world, but those cores get implemented in very different ways by partners such as Samsung and Texas Instruments, and ensuring application compatibility across multiple phones is a difficult undertaking.

The key to Google's software, however, will be how it is accepted by the public. People are drawn to sleek hardware, but they spend the majority of their time working with software. That's where an attachment is formed with a computer, and that attachment is particularly strong with a device that you would carry with you everywhere you go. No details were immediately available as to the look-and-feel of the software.

Word of the pending Google news had reached JumpTap, a competitor to Google in the mobile ads space that is not included in the announcement.

"I'm not sure if it's an industry supported even or a Google trap" to get developers to write to Google software, says Dan Olschwang, chief executive of JumpTap. "If it is really open source and the mobile phone manufacturers will adopt it, it will be a major industry changing event."

Google isn't just looking to expand its ad monetization platform to new platforms, but also to shake up the telco industry and its "walled garden" approach that limits what handsets, carriers and services consumers can use, experts said.

"Google's stated open source approach, or open net approach to life, is antithetical to the way cellular carriers look at the world," says Tim Hanlon, an executive vice president at Denuo, a consulting arm of advertising agency Publicis Groupe. Carriers are "loathe to separate device from service. They're loathe to let third-party applications play on their proprietary network."

If Google succeeds in opening up the industry it will be the biggest thing the search company has in the last couple of years, says Stephen Arnold, author of The Google Legacy and a new book, Google Version 2.0: The Calculating Predator. "The phone companies "don't understand the business Google is in and now they're talking to them!"

And the company could very well have a trump card to play, if follows through on its interest in the 700MHz spectrum auction scheduled for January 2008.

Can Google really be a mobile software developer, search engine, application house, and a wireless carrier? And will people actually want to use that? We might soon find out.

News.com's Stephen Shankland and Elinor Mills contributed to this report.

Topics:smart phones
Tags:Google, Gphone, mobile phones, Android,




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