Google Android: we want developers but…

So, I’m watching the Android video and talking with my friends who are developers. Man, I thought my videos were boring, this one takes the cake.

Steve Jobs does NOT have to worry about losing his job to the folks from Google.

I didn’t see ONE feature that will get normal people to switch from the iPhone. This comes across like something developers developed for other developers without thought of how they were going to build a movement.

How do we know this developer API is uninspired? They are bribing developers with $10 million in prize money.

Compare to the iPhone. Steve Jobs treats developers like crap. Doesn’t give them an SDK. Makes them hack the phones simply to load apps. And they create hundreds of apps anyway. Now, Apple is getting is act together. Early next year an SDK is coming. So now developers will have both sexy hardware, a sexy OS (under iPhone is OSX, an OS that’s been in wide use for years now), AND a well-thought-out SDK.

But, here’s why Android is getting received with a yawn from me:

1. It was released without a personal approach. When Steve Jobs brings out new stuff he does it in front of people. Not in a cold video (as much as I love video it doesn’t inspire the way sitting in an audience does and getting to put my own hands on it).
2. This stuff is still vaporware. No phones are available with it. At Microsoft I learned DO NOT TRUST THINGS THAT THEY WON’T SHOW ME WORKING. Remember Longhorn? Er, Vista? The first time I saw it was largely in a format like this — it looked cool but it wasn’t running anywhere and they wouldn’t let me play with the cool demos. I’ll never make that mistake again. If you want my support for your platform I need to be able to use it and show it to my friends.
3. The UI looks confused. Too many metaphors. One reason the iPhone does so well is because the UI is fairly consistent. Fun, even. How do I know this? My ex-wife hates technology and she bought one and loves it. I try to imagine her getting a Google Android phone and getting very frustrated with a mixture of drop-down menus, clicking metaphors, and touch metaphors. At some point she’ll give it back and go back to the iPhone, which only presents a touch metaphor.
4. No real “love” for developers. Heck, I don’t know of a single developer who has had his/her hands on Android. And all we get is this cold video that just doesn’t inspire me to believe in the future of the platform. I know Dave Winer didn’t feel the love from the Open Social “campfire” event, but at least there we heard from quite a few third-party developers. That made me believe in the platform because I knew that they had already gotten at least SOME third-party developers on board. Heck, remember Facebook? Go back and see when I got excited by Facebook. It was two weeks after the F8 platform announcement. Why then? Because I saw that iLike got six million users in two weeks and was staying up. So, that communicated two things to me: 1. that the platform attracted interesting developers. 2. that Facebook was well enough architected to stay up, even under pretty dramatic load. Android is a LONG way from demonstrating either of these things to the market.
5. Google needs to get atomic videos. On an announcement like this there shouldn’t have been one long video, but rather 50 small ones, each demonstrating a separate API. Developers today are busy. Fully employed. They want easy to understand instructions for how to integrate platform stuff into their stuff. It’s amazing that Google itself doesn’t understand how its own search engine works. If it did, they would see the advantage of creating lots of video, not just one (because then they would be more likely to get found for a variety of search terms, not just a few — it’s one reason I create at least a video every day and it’s paid off very well for me). I’m giving Vic Gundotra the same advice — his long Open Social “campfire video” should have been cut up into the atoms that made up that video. Sure, put the long complete video up too (the molecule) but cut it up. Yes, yes, I know, I don’t take my own advice but then I have an excuse: it costs money, er time, to edit video and I don’t have a lot of it. Google doesn’t have that excuse.
6. Google’s PR comes across as “only caring about big bangs.” Last week I was in the Open Social press conference. Everyone else in the room worked for a big-name media outlet. Business Week. Wall Street Journal. Los Angeles Times. CNET. Barrons. etc. etc. Even TechCrunch was relegated to a phone-based seat and wasn’t in the room. That tells me that Google’s PR doesn’t get the value of small people. In fact, if you were tracking the mentions of that press call you’d have seen my use of Twitter during it got mentioned many times on blogs. Google’s PR didn’t seem to even understand why Twitter was important. They also kept me from using my video camera during the press call (the only reason I got video is cause I carried a cell phone with me — they asked me to leave my professional camera out in the car). Compare that to presidential candidate John Edwards who let me film, even on his plane during “off times.” And he has a Twitter account too.
7. It looks too much like a poor copy of the iPhone. They didn’t talk about ONE thing that the iPhone doesn’t do. Where’s the car integration? Why didn’t they focus a LOT on GPS, or video creation, or something else the iPhone doesn’t do. Do we really want to spin a Google earth map? Really? That doesn’t turn me on. Showing me Kyte.tv working on this thing would turn me on — that’s something the iPhone doesn’t do. Showing me killer podcasting-creation features would turn me on. That’s something the iPhone doesn’t do well. Instead we get some video game that we all played 10 years ago. Yawn. OK, OK, I know Android plays Quake and the iPhone doesn’t. But, come on, we all know a game API is coming for the iPhone and is that really going to get a lot of people to buy Android?

Anyway, so far I’m disappointed in Android. Maybe they’ll get it together, but until then I’ll remember the Russian Government official’s cell phone. He’s running Windows Mobile. Why? Cause developers in his community are building stuff for it. I’ll keep checking in with him to see if Android has gotten any traction.

Are you sensing that Google is just not very good at technology evangelism? After all, look at how successful Google has been outside of search. It hasn’t really had a good home run that we can point to outside of that. I think that’s because Google is coming across as too arrogant, too interested in only “important developers and people,” and doesn’t understand how to pitch end users and developers at the same time (developers only really come after end users do anyway, look again at the iPhone).

But what do I know, I’m just a blogger, right?

UPDATE: Patrick, on TwitterGram, says “it looks like a ripoff of the iPhone.”

UPDATE2: other responses are rolling in from around the Internet. Engadget. GigaOm.

226 thoughts on “Google Android: we want developers but…

  1. So Open Moko will still blow this out of the water and from the developers Ive spoken to say they wont touch it till they can see a device that can run it and its basically another version of J2ME to them at first look .

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  2. So Open Moko will still blow this out of the water and from the developers Ive spoken to say they wont touch it till they can see a device that can run it and its basically another version of J2ME to them at first look .

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  3. I wonder whether either android or apple will have any impact on the european and asian markets. Considering the rather lukewarm reception of the iPhone in the UK and Germany, this might just not be depending on the SDK, but more on the amount of handsets that will have the OS on it.

    I think that the set vendors are more worried about android then they are about the iPhone overhere in Europe, regardless of the developer support.

    Google doesn’t need to pitch to the end customers, the handset makers will take care of this. And as you point out correctly, after the customers will come the developers…

    Just look at the development section of nokia, most of it is wide in the open and how many developers use it…. And the market share of nokia is a lot higher than apples iPhone.

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  4. I wonder whether either android or apple will have any impact on the european and asian markets. Considering the rather lukewarm reception of the iPhone in the UK and Germany, this might just not be depending on the SDK, but more on the amount of handsets that will have the OS on it.

    I think that the set vendors are more worried about android then they are about the iPhone overhere in Europe, regardless of the developer support.

    Google doesn’t need to pitch to the end customers, the handset makers will take care of this. And as you point out correctly, after the customers will come the developers…

    Just look at the development section of nokia, most of it is wide in the open and how many developers use it…. And the market share of nokia is a lot higher than apples iPhone.

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  5. I disagree with the disappoints comment. It JUST came out, it is not for consumers yet, and it IS Open Source. Look at Nokia N800. It does a LOT, and it is based on Linux…I am sure a lot of those apps will be a no brainier to port over. So the “No making stuff for it” doesn’t really hold water for me.

    I think you are beating up on it a little too early out of the gate.

    Also may I add that I can see the Gphone OS on several phones and the iPhone os on .. the iPhone. I think developing on a platform far and wide might make more sense than just on the iPhone. So, yes an SDK is coming for the iPhone…it still only runs on the iPhone once you make the app.

    Now, was it a Dry video presentation…Oh yea, I am with you there.

    Let me add…I do enjoy your insight and opinions on things like this.

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  6. I disagree with the disappoints comment. It JUST came out, it is not for consumers yet, and it IS Open Source. Look at Nokia N800. It does a LOT, and it is based on Linux…I am sure a lot of those apps will be a no brainier to port over. So the “No making stuff for it” doesn’t really hold water for me.

    I think you are beating up on it a little too early out of the gate.

    Also may I add that I can see the Gphone OS on several phones and the iPhone os on .. the iPhone. I think developing on a platform far and wide might make more sense than just on the iPhone. So, yes an SDK is coming for the iPhone…it still only runs on the iPhone once you make the app.

    Now, was it a Dry video presentation…Oh yea, I am with you there.

    Let me add…I do enjoy your insight and opinions on things like this.

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  7. With that much money you think Google boy could afford a decent haircut and a speech coach.

    Ok that was just mean, but it had to be said.

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  8. Their problem is that it seems like they’re building a phone aimed primarily at ‘techies’ (i.e. opensource everything but unintiuitive as far as basic functioning goes) and yet their marketing strategy seems to be aimed at the average consumer, if not the down-right uniformed consumer. However, I think I disagree with you on it being ‘Vaporware’. They seem to being trying to avoid the accusations thrown at Apple by releasing the SDK BEFORE the platform and not months afterwards, so it’s hard for them to show you anything since I doubt much of it is implemented. But it was definitely a god-awful video.

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  9. With that much money you think Google boy could afford a decent haircut and a speech coach.

    Ok that was just mean, but it had to be said.

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  10. Their problem is that it seems like they’re building a phone aimed primarily at ‘techies’ (i.e. opensource everything but unintiuitive as far as basic functioning goes) and yet their marketing strategy seems to be aimed at the average consumer, if not the down-right uniformed consumer. However, I think I disagree with you on it being ‘Vaporware’. They seem to being trying to avoid the accusations thrown at Apple by releasing the SDK BEFORE the platform and not months afterwards, so it’s hard for them to show you anything since I doubt much of it is implemented. But it was definitely a god-awful video.

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  11. Robert, I think you are off on this one. I am a mobile dev and I am psyched (and it has NOTHING to doo with the $10 mill)!!!

    It’s about an open mobile platform where the developer is free to imagine, create, and build killer apps that are deeply integrated with the phone and other apps on the device.

    It has nothing to do with the iPhone. It’s about creating a technology stack that allows for kick ass mobile applications from third party devlopers, letting manufacturers build cool devices, and having these devices run on any network/provider.

    You are right on one thing… the make/break is going to be if we see lots of devices with the Android stack.

    BTW, my favorite mobile stack right NOW is Windows Mobile.. go Russians 🙂

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  12. Robert, I think you are off on this one. I am a mobile dev and I am psyched (and it has NOTHING to doo with the $10 mill)!!!

    It’s about an open mobile platform where the developer is free to imagine, create, and build killer apps that are deeply integrated with the phone and other apps on the device.

    It has nothing to do with the iPhone. It’s about creating a technology stack that allows for kick ass mobile applications from third party devlopers, letting manufacturers build cool devices, and having these devices run on any network/provider.

    You are right on one thing… the make/break is going to be if we see lots of devices with the Android stack.

    BTW, my favorite mobile stack right NOW is Windows Mobile.. go Russians 🙂

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  13. Not Trendously impressed. I’m not getting an IPhone either until they pack a few more features.

    For now, I’m very impressed with the HTC TyTN II (The AT&T Tilt) – which packs everything in – touch screen, good music/video, 3 Mega pixel camera (and a second camera for video calls), GPS, HSDPA/3G, WiFi, Video Calling and a slide out keyboard. Admittidly, Windows Mobile isn’t nearly as pretty as the iPhone (although it is more producive), but HTC did a good job with building the Touch Flo interface over the top.

    For me, the only reason I’d switch to an iPhone or to an Android phone would be if they took all the useful features I have on my tilt and did something better on top.

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  14. Not Trendously impressed. I’m not getting an IPhone either until they pack a few more features.

    For now, I’m very impressed with the HTC TyTN II (The AT&T Tilt) – which packs everything in – touch screen, good music/video, 3 Mega pixel camera (and a second camera for video calls), GPS, HSDPA/3G, WiFi, Video Calling and a slide out keyboard. Admittidly, Windows Mobile isn’t nearly as pretty as the iPhone (although it is more producive), but HTC did a good job with building the Touch Flo interface over the top.

    For me, the only reason I’d switch to an iPhone or to an Android phone would be if they took all the useful features I have on my tilt and did something better on top.

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  15. They aren’t trying to beat the iPhone right now. They are just announcing a platform; it’s ok if it is a little dweeby and not that impressive of a video. It’s just trying to give developers an idea of what the SDK is capable of. These devices aren’t going to be coming out for a year so I think it’s a little premature to right them off today because of a lousy dev video.

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  16. It’s early days man, give it a break. Geez it’s a new approach and being open it is intended to evolve like putty in the hands of the developer community.

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  17. They aren’t trying to beat the iPhone right now. They are just announcing a platform; it’s ok if it is a little dweeby and not that impressive of a video. It’s just trying to give developers an idea of what the SDK is capable of. These devices aren’t going to be coming out for a year so I think it’s a little premature to right them off today because of a lousy dev video.

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  18. It’s early days man, give it a break. Geez it’s a new approach and being open it is intended to evolve like putty in the hands of the developer community.

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  19. Google announces an SDK, and everyone gets upset that the actual prototype being used to demo some of the apps doesn’t have good UI? Isn’t this missing the point a bit? Google isn’t building a phone. It’s building a software stack other people can use to build a phone. Given that, saying things like “OK, we have working GPS, an OpenGL-based 3D API, and built-in wrapper code for common functionality like maps” seems a lot more appropriate than “hey, this prototype that you’ll never get to use has some really consistent UI!”

    A spinning globe is no more an indication that “spinning a globe is all you can do with this phone” than a spinning cube screensaver is an indication that that’s all the Windows drawing routines can do. It’s a demo.

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  20. Google announces an SDK, and everyone gets upset that the actual prototype being used to demo some of the apps doesn’t have good UI? Isn’t this missing the point a bit? Google isn’t building a phone. It’s building a software stack other people can use to build a phone. Given that, saying things like “OK, we have working GPS, an OpenGL-based 3D API, and built-in wrapper code for common functionality like maps” seems a lot more appropriate than “hey, this prototype that you’ll never get to use has some really consistent UI!”

    A spinning globe is no more an indication that “spinning a globe is all you can do with this phone” than a spinning cube screensaver is an indication that that’s all the Windows drawing routines can do. It’s a demo.

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  21. I agree it’s probably too early to judge, but wow, those guys have absolutely *no* Steve Jobs mojo. Steve J could present a steaming pile of poo on a plate and make you want it more than anything you’ve ever wanted. Reminds me of what a friend used to say about HP marketing. That they would sell sushi as cold, wet fish.

    Google has actually never had good marketing. They have cool, interesting apps and alot of fanboys.

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  22. The important part here is your wife is excited by her iPhone. Everybody who has touched my iPhone here in France is a believer. I’ve had cellphones the moment a GSM phone fitted in a pocket and I have never been as excited again until the iPhone came out. The iPhone changed the rules – super easy to use phone AND great at the Internet. The Gphone is a copycat and just “opened” at best. But open doesn’t make consumers drool. Sorry.

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  23. I agree it’s probably too early to judge, but wow, those guys have absolutely *no* Steve Jobs mojo. Steve J could present a steaming pile of poo on a plate and make you want it more than anything you’ve ever wanted. Reminds me of what a friend used to say about HP marketing. That they would sell sushi as cold, wet fish.

    Google has actually never had good marketing. They have cool, interesting apps and alot of fanboys.

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  24. The important part here is your wife is excited by her iPhone. Everybody who has touched my iPhone here in France is a believer. I’ve had cellphones the moment a GSM phone fitted in a pocket and I have never been as excited again until the iPhone came out. The iPhone changed the rules – super easy to use phone AND great at the Internet. The Gphone is a copycat and just “opened” at best. But open doesn’t make consumers drool. Sorry.

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  25. Benoit: true. Which is why I sure wish I would have heard something different here. Open should enable developers to create different kinds of devices that simply can’t exist with a closed platform.

    How about putting a cell phone in a vacuum cleaner? What would you do if you could do that? How about putting one onto a sign on a street corner? How about one in your dashboard? How about a dockable cell that could do better sync with your PC? Instead we get a Google Maps commercial. Yawn. I already have that on my iPhone AND my Nokia!

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  26. Benoit: true. Which is why I sure wish I would have heard something different here. Open should enable developers to create different kinds of devices that simply can’t exist with a closed platform.

    How about putting a cell phone in a vacuum cleaner? What would you do if you could do that? How about putting one onto a sign on a street corner? How about one in your dashboard? How about a dockable cell that could do better sync with your PC? Instead we get a Google Maps commercial. Yawn. I already have that on my iPhone AND my Nokia!

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  27. I’m a developer but not a mobile phone developer. What makes android attractive to me is that it makes mobile phone development seem like a viable software business all of a sudden. I can target a lot of phones with a single development platform. Windows mobile had the same promise but it turned out to be only for the highest end phones. Maybe android will be the same way and I am just caught up in the marketing hype.

    If you look at the iPhone, I think it will follow the same arc as the Apple computer. Incredibly innovative, but eventually Apple’s insistence on controlling every millimeter of the platform will relegate it to a niche market.

    For example, the Macintosh is gorgeous. I drool on the anti-aliasing and wide screen monitors every time I go to the Apple store. but I use a PC because every application I need runs better on a PC. I think it is because Windows is more developer friendly. The best applications for the Mac were developed by Apple.

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  28. I’m a developer but not a mobile phone developer. What makes android attractive to me is that it makes mobile phone development seem like a viable software business all of a sudden. I can target a lot of phones with a single development platform. Windows mobile had the same promise but it turned out to be only for the highest end phones. Maybe android will be the same way and I am just caught up in the marketing hype.

    If you look at the iPhone, I think it will follow the same arc as the Apple computer. Incredibly innovative, but eventually Apple’s insistence on controlling every millimeter of the platform will relegate it to a niche market.

    For example, the Macintosh is gorgeous. I drool on the anti-aliasing and wide screen monitors every time I go to the Apple store. but I use a PC because every application I need runs better on a PC. I think it is because Windows is more developer friendly. The best applications for the Mac were developed by Apple.

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  29. I know they didn’t really knock us out with anything that had a real ‘Wow’ factor, but seems like a lot of criticism right out the gate! It also seems kind of unfair to compare a nascent community-based, open source development environment with very polished proprietary, *closed sourced* PRODUCTS. But hey, they had a crappy video and the bloggers had to sit in the cheap seats at its release (?)

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  30. I know they didn’t really knock us out with anything that had a real ‘Wow’ factor, but seems like a lot of criticism right out the gate! It also seems kind of unfair to compare a nascent community-based, open source development environment with very polished proprietary, *closed sourced* PRODUCTS. But hey, they had a crappy video and the bloggers had to sit in the cheap seats at its release (?)

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  31. “I didn’t see ONE feature that will get normal people to switch from the iPhone.”

    Well… Normal people don’t use the iPhone, do they? No, they use all the other phones that are out there. The videos appealed to me, but then you’re not a developer, are you.

    The markets Google and Apple are targeting are entirely different, so comparing their initiatives on the mobile front is like comparing apples and oranges.

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  32. “I didn’t see ONE feature that will get normal people to switch from the iPhone.”

    Well… Normal people don’t use the iPhone, do they? No, they use all the other phones that are out there. The videos appealed to me, but then you’re not a developer, are you.

    The markets Google and Apple are targeting are entirely different, so comparing their initiatives on the mobile front is like comparing apples and oranges.

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  33. He sounds like Ben Stein. “I am excited about this product. I will show you how excited I am about this product by not smiling, talking in a monotone voice, and reading cue cards. Wow. That’s spectacular.”

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  34. He sounds like Ben Stein. “I am excited about this product. I will show you how excited I am about this product by not smiling, talking in a monotone voice, and reading cue cards. Wow. That’s spectacular.”

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  35. I don’t think Scoble understands this very well. This is not iPhone versus Android.

    There is no reason iPhones can’t run Android applications. Android is designed in such a way that it would be easy for Apple (or Motorola or Palm) to make products that support Android apps?

    Why would they want to do that? Because there is going to be a massive community of developers out there building awesome cross-platform applications.

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  36. I don’t think Scoble understands this very well. This is not iPhone versus Android.

    There is no reason iPhones can’t run Android applications. Android is designed in such a way that it would be easy for Apple (or Motorola or Palm) to make products that support Android apps?

    Why would they want to do that? Because there is going to be a massive community of developers out there building awesome cross-platform applications.

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  37. Wow, agree. You sick? You’ve been making sense lately. Totally something developers developed for other developers to show off their way cool developer skills, like most of what Google ever does. Arrogant Stanford grads masturbating to their own code.

    The iPhone is nice, but more a toy, Blackberry, full-sized QWERTY keyboarders and PDA phones far more productive, though not as much fun. But sadly iPhone is saddled with AT&T’s EDGE 2g inferior network. But with hacks, it’s good, and 1.1.2 was hosed almost in minutes.

    With Voyager on 3g EV-DO, with the best of iPhone and QWERTY’s and then a slew of new Sony Ericsson’s and Nokia’s (Haptikos) and Sidekick LX and on and on and on, a Googleish API Phone is a joke at best.

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  38. Wow, agree. You sick? You’ve been making sense lately. Totally something developers developed for other developers to show off their way cool developer skills, like most of what Google ever does. Arrogant Stanford grads masturbating to their own code.

    The iPhone is nice, but more a toy, Blackberry, full-sized QWERTY keyboarders and PDA phones far more productive, though not as much fun. But sadly iPhone is saddled with AT&T’s EDGE 2g inferior network. But with hacks, it’s good, and 1.1.2 was hosed almost in minutes.

    With Voyager on 3g EV-DO, with the best of iPhone and QWERTY’s and then a slew of new Sony Ericsson’s and Nokia’s (Haptikos) and Sidekick LX and on and on and on, a Googleish API Phone is a joke at best.

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  39. I agree, this is an empty announcement. I think since Apple announced they would release an iPhone SDK, Google felt compelled to show their hand early. It turns how to be a half-baked SDK or at least the total story is not really written.

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  40. I agree, this is an empty announcement. I think since Apple announced they would release an iPhone SDK, Google felt compelled to show their hand early. It turns how to be a half-baked SDK or at least the total story is not really written.

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  41. I would admit that this demo does not impress me big time. iPhone can easily beat almost most of the stuff they demoed, except the openGL part. However, Windows Mobile may have a hard time competing with Android.

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  42. I would admit that this demo does not impress me big time. iPhone can easily beat almost most of the stuff they demoed, except the openGL part. However, Windows Mobile may have a hard time competing with Android.

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  43. The iPhone is simply too expensive (at least here in Germany). Even half the price would be too much for such a (nice) toy.

    I like Apple and I could afford the iPhone but I don’t like robbery.

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  44. The iPhone is simply too expensive (at least here in Germany). Even half the price would be too much for such a (nice) toy.

    I like Apple and I could afford the iPhone but I don’t like robbery.

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  45. Clearly the jury is still out as we haven’t really seen much of anything, yet, but I think that people should be considering this as developers showing off an architecture and some APIs, not a handset manufacturer showing off a feature-complete (or even a prototype) phone.

    If Apple had shown the iPhone at the initial stages and demoed the accelerometer and multi-touch screen APIs, people would probably have fallen asleep in the audience. It wasn’t until Steve rotated the phone and it switched to landscape mode and showed off the “pinch” that people went “wow.” But the former had to happen before the latter.

    Personally, I don’t want to be excited about slick apps at the start of a project; I want to be excited about an architecture. If the architecture sucks, it’s going to be a tangled, nasty mess and ultimately a poor user experience. You may be able to graft some slick apps on top of a crappy architecture, but ultimately things will fall apart. See, for example, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palm_OS

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  46. Clearly the jury is still out as we haven’t really seen much of anything, yet, but I think that people should be considering this as developers showing off an architecture and some APIs, not a handset manufacturer showing off a feature-complete (or even a prototype) phone.

    If Apple had shown the iPhone at the initial stages and demoed the accelerometer and multi-touch screen APIs, people would probably have fallen asleep in the audience. It wasn’t until Steve rotated the phone and it switched to landscape mode and showed off the “pinch” that people went “wow.” But the former had to happen before the latter.

    Personally, I don’t want to be excited about slick apps at the start of a project; I want to be excited about an architecture. If the architecture sucks, it’s going to be a tangled, nasty mess and ultimately a poor user experience. You may be able to graft some slick apps on top of a crappy architecture, but ultimately things will fall apart. See, for example, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palm_OS

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  47. “…doesn’t understand how to pitch end users and developers at the same time (developers only really come after end users do anyway, look again at the iPhone).”

    And yet, even this statement is missing the point. Developers are users too, they just think slightly differently. 😉

    The problem lies in the fact that you have to make a developer want the device for themselves, and then to have the [coinciding] desire to write their code/application for that device.

    There is a less-common desire to write your code/application for a device others use but you don’t; which while entirely true in some cases, does *only* follow end-users and even then not always, and is much more infrequent than the first case.

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  48. “…doesn’t understand how to pitch end users and developers at the same time (developers only really come after end users do anyway, look again at the iPhone).”

    And yet, even this statement is missing the point. Developers are users too, they just think slightly differently. 😉

    The problem lies in the fact that you have to make a developer want the device for themselves, and then to have the [coinciding] desire to write their code/application for that device.

    There is a less-common desire to write your code/application for a device others use but you don’t; which while entirely true in some cases, does *only* follow end-users and even then not always, and is much more infrequent than the first case.

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  49. “I didn’t see ONE feature that will get normal people to switch from the iPhone.”

    Dumbest statement. Ever. Hate to break it to you Robert, but there aren’t that many iPhone users out there. It is a very, very small market. Anybody just going for that market would be setting their sights low. Now of course Apple is hoping to expand that market rapidly, which is why they dropped the price by 33% just a few moths after the highly touted debut.

    Further, it is silly to compare some prototypes to a polished retail product. The real success of the Android platform will be how many phones are built with it. Now you can definitely compare those phones to the iPhone. That would be a true apple-to-Apple comparison…

    Meanwhile as others have pointed out, this is a huge difference maker for developers. Mobile device development is so fragmented and painful right now. This is not just an SDK, it is an SDK that provides access to phone hardware that is rarely accessible to most developers. Plus it runs Java, so one can imagine that many Java based apps and games are already going to work on this thing. That should be no surprise since Google Mail, Talk, and Maps are all Java apps.

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  50. “I didn’t see ONE feature that will get normal people to switch from the iPhone.”

    Dumbest statement. Ever. Hate to break it to you Robert, but there aren’t that many iPhone users out there. It is a very, very small market. Anybody just going for that market would be setting their sights low. Now of course Apple is hoping to expand that market rapidly, which is why they dropped the price by 33% just a few moths after the highly touted debut.

    Further, it is silly to compare some prototypes to a polished retail product. The real success of the Android platform will be how many phones are built with it. Now you can definitely compare those phones to the iPhone. That would be a true apple-to-Apple comparison…

    Meanwhile as others have pointed out, this is a huge difference maker for developers. Mobile device development is so fragmented and painful right now. This is not just an SDK, it is an SDK that provides access to phone hardware that is rarely accessible to most developers. Plus it runs Java, so one can imagine that many Java based apps and games are already going to work on this thing. That should be no surprise since Google Mail, Talk, and Maps are all Java apps.

    Like

  51. You do know this is a platform they purchased two years ago from Danger–a company founded by BeOS engineers, right?.

    Like

  52. You do know this is a platform they purchased two years ago from Danger–a company founded by BeOS engineers, right?.

    Like

  53. Hi Robert, personally I welcome the competition. Even if Android turns out to be not capable of bringing better services to mobile users, it might just inspire the competition to work at it. We are still in the stone age of mobile internet with a total lack of easy and user centric UI’s and applications that add value to my mobile experience.
    But let’s wait and see. I think that if developers start working on the Android OS we might get a few surprises after all.

    Like

  54. Hi Robert, personally I welcome the competition. Even if Android turns out to be not capable of bringing better services to mobile users, it might just inspire the competition to work at it. We are still in the stone age of mobile internet with a total lack of easy and user centric UI’s and applications that add value to my mobile experience.
    But let’s wait and see. I think that if developers start working on the Android OS we might get a few surprises after all.

    Like

  55. Wow, I think you are being a iPhone PhanBoy here … Patrick is correct that this is a “ripoff” of the iPhone which is why the phones built with this platform may be so popular – iPhones for $100 sounds good to me. I have a Treo650 which is NO match for the iPhone. I would have bought an iPhone, but now I’ll wait for the gPhone. Why? Cheaper and will have better integration with my gMail and Google maps and Google document world.

    Like

  56. Wow, I think you are being a iPhone PhanBoy here … Patrick is correct that this is a “ripoff” of the iPhone which is why the phones built with this platform may be so popular – iPhones for $100 sounds good to me. I have a Treo650 which is NO match for the iPhone. I would have bought an iPhone, but now I’ll wait for the gPhone. Why? Cheaper and will have better integration with my gMail and Google maps and Google document world.

    Like

  57. Why are you such a negative douche-bag? Is it because of the Fake Steve Jobs post re-telling the story of you being a sucky-baby when you were screaming and whining to Google to give you a Google-phone?

    Like that article said, check with your friends Dave Winer or Om Malik first. At least people listen to them.

    Like

  58. Why are you such a negative douche-bag? Is it because of the Fake Steve Jobs post re-telling the story of you being a sucky-baby when you were screaming and whining to Google to give you a Google-phone?

    Like that article said, check with your friends Dave Winer or Om Malik first. At least people listen to them.

    Like

  59. “I didn’t see ONE feature that will get normal people to switch from the iPhone.”

    Normal people won’t buy the iPhone! 🙂

    As for other phones — it’ll be cheap. The iPhone has been out what, a few months and yes it’s a great status quo. But if you compare what Android does vs pretty much any other phone, it starts looking pretty competitive I reckon.

    Like

  60. “I didn’t see ONE feature that will get normal people to switch from the iPhone.”

    Normal people won’t buy the iPhone! 🙂

    As for other phones — it’ll be cheap. The iPhone has been out what, a few months and yes it’s a great status quo. But if you compare what Android does vs pretty much any other phone, it starts looking pretty competitive I reckon.

    Like

  61. I don’t get you Scoble. Half the time you say some insightful things and I learn a lot from reading your blog – but the other half of the time you come across as a whiney 12-year-old.

    If the OHA is successful, people are going to throw this post back in your face just like people did with the posts of all of the haters when Apple announced V1.0 of the iPod.

    In my opinion, and I don’t pretend to be some grand wizard of technology like you do – apparently without any justification whatsoever, I might add – there is clearly a movement toward more open standards in technology and Apple, regardless of the gee-whiz technology they’ve included in the iPhone, is making the same mistake they made with the Macintosh platform back in the 80s. There’s a reason Apple only has 6% of the home computer market. And don’t tell me that finally releasing an SDK – while still controlling what applications are available via iTunes – is really making the iPhone “open.” More open, yes, but truly open as it appears the OHA handsets will be, not a chance.

    Also, the iPhone’s features – while they may have been difficult to envision in the first place – are not difficult to copy. And the iPhone is merely going to set the benchmark for successful mobiles in the future – including any OHA mobiles that want to be successful.

    I guess you post junk like this just to stir up a controversy and thereby boost your page views, but it’s frankly insulting to you readers and should be beneath you.

    Like

  62. I don’t get you Scoble. Half the time you say some insightful things and I learn a lot from reading your blog – but the other half of the time you come across as a whiney 12-year-old.

    If the OHA is successful, people are going to throw this post back in your face just like people did with the posts of all of the haters when Apple announced V1.0 of the iPod.

    In my opinion, and I don’t pretend to be some grand wizard of technology like you do – apparently without any justification whatsoever, I might add – there is clearly a movement toward more open standards in technology and Apple, regardless of the gee-whiz technology they’ve included in the iPhone, is making the same mistake they made with the Macintosh platform back in the 80s. There’s a reason Apple only has 6% of the home computer market. And don’t tell me that finally releasing an SDK – while still controlling what applications are available via iTunes – is really making the iPhone “open.” More open, yes, but truly open as it appears the OHA handsets will be, not a chance.

    Also, the iPhone’s features – while they may have been difficult to envision in the first place – are not difficult to copy. And the iPhone is merely going to set the benchmark for successful mobiles in the future – including any OHA mobiles that want to be successful.

    I guess you post junk like this just to stir up a controversy and thereby boost your page views, but it’s frankly insulting to you readers and should be beneath you.

    Like

  63. “How about putting a cell phone in a vacuum cleaner?”

    Is this really the best you can come up with Scoble?

    Like

  64. “How about putting a cell phone in a vacuum cleaner?”

    Is this really the best you can come up with Scoble?

    Like

  65. I fear you did not get the actual plot of this platform. What you saw is a ‘place holder’/reference implementation. Please do not any assumptions of this being the finalized UI metaphors. The UI, Phone functionality, Extra-phone features, etc.. etc.. can ALL be altered to suit your needs/tastes with this platform. Understand – this is an SDK – a Great one at it(I’ve got my Europa loaded already with ADT and is coding away happily) – for the ultimate+unified mobility platforms.

    Like

  66. I fear you did not get the actual plot of this platform. What you saw is a ‘place holder’/reference implementation. Please do not any assumptions of this being the finalized UI metaphors. The UI, Phone functionality, Extra-phone features, etc.. etc.. can ALL be altered to suit your needs/tastes with this platform. Understand – this is an SDK – a Great one at it(I’ve got my Europa loaded already with ADT and is coding away happily) – for the ultimate+unified mobility platforms.

    Like

  67. Hi Robert,

    I have to say I’m a little nonplussed at your derision of the video. I’m a developer who writes desktop apps for a living and is starting to hack web stuff in my spare time. I live in Europe. I don’t care that Steve Jobs gives great presentations (I won’t be there), or that TechCrunch weren’t invited. I don’t care whether it looks like a copy of an iPhone – I’ve never seen an iPhone.

    The video is ok (and it’s video that matters, not whether some gadget blowhards are getting advance previews – not directed at you btw), and it’s reasonably effective. If it’s being straight with me, then I see the following: an open platform, which for me is accessible and familiar – I run on a solid open source stack already; straight forward functionality that replicates what I’m already familiar with; based on open toolsets that I’m already familiar with.

    Frankly I’m having a hard time understanding the negativity. It does appear that it’s a result of simply not pandering to the audience of Scobles etc. I’m sitting 6000 miles away, and it doesn’t bother me in the slightest. I’m sure there are many others like me.

    Like

  68. Hi Robert,

    I have to say I’m a little nonplussed at your derision of the video. I’m a developer who writes desktop apps for a living and is starting to hack web stuff in my spare time. I live in Europe. I don’t care that Steve Jobs gives great presentations (I won’t be there), or that TechCrunch weren’t invited. I don’t care whether it looks like a copy of an iPhone – I’ve never seen an iPhone.

    The video is ok (and it’s video that matters, not whether some gadget blowhards are getting advance previews – not directed at you btw), and it’s reasonably effective. If it’s being straight with me, then I see the following: an open platform, which for me is accessible and familiar – I run on a solid open source stack already; straight forward functionality that replicates what I’m already familiar with; based on open toolsets that I’m already familiar with.

    Frankly I’m having a hard time understanding the negativity. It does appear that it’s a result of simply not pandering to the audience of Scobles etc. I’m sitting 6000 miles away, and it doesn’t bother me in the slightest. I’m sure there are many others like me.

    Like

  69. Developers don’t need (or want) over the top videos telling us how awesome-super-cool and XTREME-industry-changing a product is.

    You shouldn’t need a visionary and a marketing company to get you excited about a platform!

    Like

  70. Developers don’t need (or want) over the top videos telling us how awesome-super-cool and XTREME-industry-changing a product is.

    You shouldn’t need a visionary and a marketing company to get you excited about a platform!

    Like

  71. I am guessing, and it is a guess, that you didn’t bother watching the architecture videos, or the HOWTO video? If you had you would have seen the potential of the platform and what you can do with the frameworks.

    In fact I know you didn’t watch the arch videos, because you didn’t mention one of the most relevant and interesting points – you might write code in Java, but it runs on Google’s own in-house VM and NOT on J2ME.

    Maybe you should get your developer friends to watch more than the demos?

    Like

  72. I am guessing, and it is a guess, that you didn’t bother watching the architecture videos, or the HOWTO video? If you had you would have seen the potential of the platform and what you can do with the frameworks.

    In fact I know you didn’t watch the arch videos, because you didn’t mention one of the most relevant and interesting points – you might write code in Java, but it runs on Google’s own in-house VM and NOT on J2ME.

    Maybe you should get your developer friends to watch more than the demos?

    Like

  73. Sorry, but you’re ignoring the fact that the iphone will never be available in some places (I live in Argentina) and my options are:
    Find somebody in the US that buys me a iphone, hack it and use it with any carrier here. Perhaps I’ll brick it on the process… right?
    Or:
    Wait, buy any phone I want that has android on it and do a legal activation with my current carrier.

    Like

  74. You are well off the mark here.

    First, understand Googles target audience with this announcement. Heres a hint – its not hi-profile tech-savy bloggers like yourself, or end customers, duh!. Btw, I don’t work in tech or phones, and these videos from google were more exciting to me that any of your recent videos. Their targets are developers and phone manufacturers. And developers don’t want atomic videos, they want documents and specifications and this is what they’ve got. Imagine a developer saying “How do I implent feature x?, s**t theirs no atomic video describing the API, now I’m screwed”…. yeah, right!

    And all this crap about how you haven’t seen it, its vapourware, etc, well boo-hoo – if you look at all the release info some of the google devs have been using android on mobile devices for 6 months! Note that android is based on technically the best software stack you could conceive – i.e. a linux core with Java apps – both established, open and proven technologies in the mobile world. This approach takes care automatically of perhaps the biggest problem the iphone is encountering in allowing 3rd party apps, namely security. Additionally, realise that due to this approach, it would be easy to mix in non-java code in the future.

    As to the multiple interface control options – you’re again missing the point. They are talking about the capabilities of an operating system, not a single device. Phone manufacturers can expose control options as they choose in order to make a coherent interface. They point is *they have choice*.

    As to the $10 million prize for apps, yes google are buying developers to write apps, yes they are seemingly a little late to the game, and yes this shows that they are bloody serious about android. Ultimately what your observations of the iphone hacking scence should have taught you is that a key reason people buy ‘smartphones’ is for 3rd party apps. So how successfully do you think a financially incentivised open source mobile operating system designed for 3rd party applications will be? Don’t be stupid, this is going to be huge.

    Your blog post reads very much as a “give mes one of your new toys to play with or I’ll trash it for no good reason”.

    Like

  75. Sorry, but you’re ignoring the fact that the iphone will never be available in some places (I live in Argentina) and my options are:
    Find somebody in the US that buys me a iphone, hack it and use it with any carrier here. Perhaps I’ll brick it on the process… right?
    Or:
    Wait, buy any phone I want that has android on it and do a legal activation with my current carrier.

    Like

  76. You are well off the mark here.

    First, understand Googles target audience with this announcement. Heres a hint – its not hi-profile tech-savy bloggers like yourself, or end customers, duh!. Btw, I don’t work in tech or phones, and these videos from google were more exciting to me that any of your recent videos. Their targets are developers and phone manufacturers. And developers don’t want atomic videos, they want documents and specifications and this is what they’ve got. Imagine a developer saying “How do I implent feature x?, s**t theirs no atomic video describing the API, now I’m screwed”…. yeah, right!

    And all this crap about how you haven’t seen it, its vapourware, etc, well boo-hoo – if you look at all the release info some of the google devs have been using android on mobile devices for 6 months! Note that android is based on technically the best software stack you could conceive – i.e. a linux core with Java apps – both established, open and proven technologies in the mobile world. This approach takes care automatically of perhaps the biggest problem the iphone is encountering in allowing 3rd party apps, namely security. Additionally, realise that due to this approach, it would be easy to mix in non-java code in the future.

    As to the multiple interface control options – you’re again missing the point. They are talking about the capabilities of an operating system, not a single device. Phone manufacturers can expose control options as they choose in order to make a coherent interface. They point is *they have choice*.

    As to the $10 million prize for apps, yes google are buying developers to write apps, yes they are seemingly a little late to the game, and yes this shows that they are bloody serious about android. Ultimately what your observations of the iphone hacking scence should have taught you is that a key reason people buy ‘smartphones’ is for 3rd party apps. So how successfully do you think a financially incentivised open source mobile operating system designed for 3rd party applications will be? Don’t be stupid, this is going to be huge.

    Your blog post reads very much as a “give mes one of your new toys to play with or I’ll trash it for no good reason”.

    Like

  77. Scoble: It is not a phone! It’s a framework, with an SDK available for Windows, OS X(Intel), and Linux, which allows developers to write applications in Java and test them in an emulator. There is complete and excellent documentation of the very extensive API, and an emerging support community. What you saw in the videos was very likely an early hardware prototype, and not representative of any final incarnation of the Android platform on a device.

    That should put the whole iPhone comparison thing to rest.

    In terms of the SDK, Android is indeed pretty exciting, due to the sheer breadth of libraries available (OpenGL ES, XMPP, full phone stack/contacts access, etc) and the elegance of the API (it’s NOT another version of J2ME, please at least look at the sample code).

    It’s hardly vapourware from the point of view of a developer. You can, today, download the SDK and start writing applications which have access to nearly everything on the phone. Sure, OpenMoko would be even cooler, with the hardware accessible now, but Android is by no means a certain dud.

    Like

  78. Scoble: It is not a phone! It’s a framework, with an SDK available for Windows, OS X(Intel), and Linux, which allows developers to write applications in Java and test them in an emulator. There is complete and excellent documentation of the very extensive API, and an emerging support community. What you saw in the videos was very likely an early hardware prototype, and not representative of any final incarnation of the Android platform on a device.

    That should put the whole iPhone comparison thing to rest.

    In terms of the SDK, Android is indeed pretty exciting, due to the sheer breadth of libraries available (OpenGL ES, XMPP, full phone stack/contacts access, etc) and the elegance of the API (it’s NOT another version of J2ME, please at least look at the sample code).

    It’s hardly vapourware from the point of view of a developer. You can, today, download the SDK and start writing applications which have access to nearly everything on the phone. Sure, OpenMoko would be even cooler, with the hardware accessible now, but Android is by no means a certain dud.

    Like

  79. Wow. You missed the point.
    Do realize this is not a phone, but a phone platform. And that too a free and open one.

    Like

  80. Wow. You missed the point.
    Do realize this is not a phone, but a phone platform. And that too a free and open one.

    Like

  81. Speaking as a developer, I can’t remember the last time a platform has excited me as much as the iPhone. I know many developers are, like me, already hacking away at apps on jailbreaked iPhones in preparation for the official SDK. Its capabilities are simply awesome. Developing for it is a joy, even without any official tools; it’s OS X, after all. If Apple plays their cards right, we’ll see many revolutionary, killer apps to emerge on the iPhone well before any Android device has even seen the light of day. No bribe from Apple required. I’d even be worried if I were Nintendo — iPhone will be the dominant platform for the next generation of mobile gaming, mark my words.

    Android? It feels like Symbian all over again. I’m very underwhelmed.

    Like

  82. Speaking as a developer, I can’t remember the last time a platform has excited me as much as the iPhone. I know many developers are, like me, already hacking away at apps on jailbreaked iPhones in preparation for the official SDK. Its capabilities are simply awesome. Developing for it is a joy, even without any official tools; it’s OS X, after all. If Apple plays their cards right, we’ll see many revolutionary, killer apps to emerge on the iPhone well before any Android device has even seen the light of day. No bribe from Apple required. I’d even be worried if I were Nintendo — iPhone will be the dominant platform for the next generation of mobile gaming, mark my words.

    Android? It feels like Symbian all over again. I’m very underwhelmed.

    Like

  83. Well I for one welcome the android too. Android doesn’t compete with the iPhone, but it seems to deliver a stable, well integrated development platform for the mobile, so it’s competing directly with Windows Mobile and Symbian. It hits the soft spot of those by giving us a tightly integrated mobile experience, something that’s never been achieved by Windows Mobile, Symbian or even Pam OS.

    iPhone is still only 1.5 million phones on 2 billion. Google is doing a Microsoft here. By 2010 we’ll have 5% iPhones and 95% phones running on an (open) OS that’s easy to develop for. And add Opensocial to the equation and suddenly all mobile apps will behave like a blackberry behaves for email on a mobile device.

    The only thing I don’t like about the announcement is the price contest. Seems to me not the best way to stimulate innovation and creativity. They should also not make the mistake that Microsoft made and only embrace the developers, they should embrace open source psychologists, graphic designers, usability engineers and antropologists as well

    Like

  84. Well I for one welcome the android too. Android doesn’t compete with the iPhone, but it seems to deliver a stable, well integrated development platform for the mobile, so it’s competing directly with Windows Mobile and Symbian. It hits the soft spot of those by giving us a tightly integrated mobile experience, something that’s never been achieved by Windows Mobile, Symbian or even Pam OS.

    iPhone is still only 1.5 million phones on 2 billion. Google is doing a Microsoft here. By 2010 we’ll have 5% iPhones and 95% phones running on an (open) OS that’s easy to develop for. And add Opensocial to the equation and suddenly all mobile apps will behave like a blackberry behaves for email on a mobile device.

    The only thing I don’t like about the announcement is the price contest. Seems to me not the best way to stimulate innovation and creativity. They should also not make the mistake that Microsoft made and only embrace the developers, they should embrace open source psychologists, graphic designers, usability engineers and antropologists as well

    Like

  85. This is a ridiculous post. I built my first Android app yesterday in about 15 minutes using the handset simulator. The SDK is exactly what I am looking for. The platform looks very solid. As a long time Apple developer I know better than to invest resources to support proprietary Apple technology again. Jobs does not care about developers. Google obviously does. Thank you Android team!

    Like

  86. This is a ridiculous post. I built my first Android app yesterday in about 15 minutes using the handset simulator. The SDK is exactly what I am looking for. The platform looks very solid. As a long time Apple developer I know better than to invest resources to support proprietary Apple technology again. Jobs does not care about developers. Google obviously does. Thank you Android team!

    Like

  87. I can just laugh at you. I mean… whats your education? Who are you all of the sudden to judge things that analytics reviewed so many times with developers that you can’t even imagine?

    Get yourself some good faculty diploma, then you can discuss things like that, but before that… you’re just one of the bloggers who wants to get hit with visits.

    did you ever checked SDK in eclipse? did you checked their documentation? no? did your programmers friends? i don’t think so.

    Attention whore!

    Like

  88. I can just laugh at you. I mean… whats your education? Who are you all of the sudden to judge things that analytics reviewed so many times with developers that you can’t even imagine?

    Get yourself some good faculty diploma, then you can discuss things like that, but before that… you’re just one of the bloggers who wants to get hit with visits.

    did you ever checked SDK in eclipse? did you checked their documentation? no? did your programmers friends? i don’t think so.

    Attention whore!

    Like

  89. I guess I should clue some in that Google does have sort of a competitor fast approaching..

    Just imagine a Mobile ajax runtime that allows the Mobile User to create Mobile widgets using html,css, and javascfipt its called MobileY! and currently is development in far away lab

    ipHone succeed because it went after Mobile Users..

    Another term for MobileY! is a Social Mobile Browser for every mobile user..

    I am taking a huge risk here in getting into trouble with my top bosses..

    Lets just say I am kicking Purple Dinosaurs through the SF49ers Uprights..

    Videos for Mobile Users Coming soon 🙂

    Like

  90. I guess I should clue some in that Google does have sort of a competitor fast approaching..

    Just imagine a Mobile ajax runtime that allows the Mobile User to create Mobile widgets using html,css, and javascfipt its called MobileY! and currently is development in far away lab

    ipHone succeed because it went after Mobile Users..

    Another term for MobileY! is a Social Mobile Browser for every mobile user..

    I am taking a huge risk here in getting into trouble with my top bosses..

    Lets just say I am kicking Purple Dinosaurs through the SF49ers Uprights..

    Videos for Mobile Users Coming soon 🙂

    Like

  91. So the iPhone SDK is “well thought-out” is it? That’s interesting – because as far as I know, neither you nor anyone else has seen it.

    You’re happy to talk about the iPhone SDK as if it were god’s gift to mobile developers, while complaining that the Google SDK, which is here, now, is vapourware?

    Like

  92. So the iPhone SDK is “well thought-out” is it? That’s interesting – because as far as I know, neither you nor anyone else has seen it.

    You’re happy to talk about the iPhone SDK as if it were god’s gift to mobile developers, while complaining that the Google SDK, which is here, now, is vapourware?

    Like

  93. I think that Android will benefit in the short term iPhone, Windows Mobiles devices and Symbian devices.
    Seems ‘paradoxical’ but Google will make the Mobile Market more dynamic but benefits others vendors instead of Google itself.
    And even Android is far from the developers side without offering a C/C++ way to develop native applications.

    Like

  94. I think that Android will benefit in the short term iPhone, Windows Mobiles devices and Symbian devices.
    Seems ‘paradoxical’ but Google will make the Mobile Market more dynamic but benefits others vendors instead of Google itself.
    And even Android is far from the developers side without offering a C/C++ way to develop native applications.

    Like

  95. I think Andriod is a step in the right direction, which is allowing the “public” develop the apps that will be useful in everyday life, but has a ways to go.

    Like

  96. I think Andriod is a step in the right direction, which is allowing the “public” develop the apps that will be useful in everyday life, but has a ways to go.

    Like

  97. Heh! Do you really believe Scoble, that Apple’s developer’s SDK would be as flexible/powerful as Google’s OS. Apple never gives power to developers. Face it.

    Like

  98. Heh! Do you really believe Scoble, that Apple’s developer’s SDK would be as flexible/powerful as Google’s OS. Apple never gives power to developers. Face it.

    Like

  99. Android is not a copy of the iPhone, and the iPhone is hardly perfect. In fact, from the demo video, Android looks a lot better than the iPhone. At least I can chat and receive notifications while I am doing something such a browsing. Woo… The iPhone has it’s work cut out for it in terms of integrating actual application communication with their pretty “perfect” UI. Ugh…

    Like

  100. Android is not a copy of the iPhone, and the iPhone is hardly perfect. In fact, from the demo video, Android looks a lot better than the iPhone. At least I can chat and receive notifications while I am doing something such a browsing. Woo… The iPhone has it’s work cut out for it in terms of integrating actual application communication with their pretty “perfect” UI. Ugh…

    Like

  101. People who want push email, people who like to chat, people who want enterprise applications on their phone…. should definitely prefer Android to the iPhone. Not everyone puts a beautiful UI at the top of their list… and that Android prototype UI certainly looks better than every mobile OS other than iPhone.

    And lets not forget that menus are still being implemented if I am not mistaken.

    Like

  102. People who want push email, people who like to chat, people who want enterprise applications on their phone…. should definitely prefer Android to the iPhone. Not everyone puts a beautiful UI at the top of their list… and that Android prototype UI certainly looks better than every mobile OS other than iPhone.

    And lets not forget that menus are still being implemented if I am not mistaken.

    Like

  103. I downloaded the sdk and tested it. The gui is nice, it can be used almost the same way as my old and long ago replaced ericsson t20, even the placement of the menus are the same. The touchscreen is not really needed, you can get by only using the arrow keys and the yes/no menu/back buttons, very handy for one handed operation.

    The emulator is trickier. It runs a computer with qemu, that uses a linux kernel, a boot ramdisk and two disk images. The images contain linux filesystems with the binary programs (like an sql server) that is needed for linux to work. The gui’s bottom part is binary and written in c++, but the windowing system runs is java. The runtime is a modified java vm, much like the one used on some sony-ericsson phones.

    The main difference between this and the apple iphone is that this environment theoretically allows the use of home made hardware, but it contains a few non open source kernel and software components. I hope they can be replaced with standard open source code. It would be possible to write c++ applications that tie into the gui and can be controlled from the java side windowing system. (like windowing and menus in java, 3d rendering in c++, just like on certain mri kits)

    My conclusion is that this sdk is mostly the hardware developers sdk, mainly aimed at getting the environment up and running on an actual hardware, but it got tailored for running demos. Imho if we could find the source or at least the apis for the proprietary modules, it would be possible to get the whole system up and running on any hardware, including running it natively on anything that can run linux. I like this approach better, because this way I could use it with my own home made gsm hardware (via nano+gsm module+touch lcd+battery), or even install the android environment as an application under openmoko. The only thing preventing people from building linux based phones is the lack of gsm services (like sms and mms handing in thunderbird or a dialer with proper contact lists).

    They could only blow their chance is by keeping the runtime environment closed and only licensing it to device manufacturers. I don’t know if they open up these subsystem too, but the current sdk doesn’t have them in source form.

    Like

  104. I downloaded the sdk and tested it. The gui is nice, it can be used almost the same way as my old and long ago replaced ericsson t20, even the placement of the menus are the same. The touchscreen is not really needed, you can get by only using the arrow keys and the yes/no menu/back buttons, very handy for one handed operation.

    The emulator is trickier. It runs a computer with qemu, that uses a linux kernel, a boot ramdisk and two disk images. The images contain linux filesystems with the binary programs (like an sql server) that is needed for linux to work. The gui’s bottom part is binary and written in c++, but the windowing system runs is java. The runtime is a modified java vm, much like the one used on some sony-ericsson phones.

    The main difference between this and the apple iphone is that this environment theoretically allows the use of home made hardware, but it contains a few non open source kernel and software components. I hope they can be replaced with standard open source code. It would be possible to write c++ applications that tie into the gui and can be controlled from the java side windowing system. (like windowing and menus in java, 3d rendering in c++, just like on certain mri kits)

    My conclusion is that this sdk is mostly the hardware developers sdk, mainly aimed at getting the environment up and running on an actual hardware, but it got tailored for running demos. Imho if we could find the source or at least the apis for the proprietary modules, it would be possible to get the whole system up and running on any hardware, including running it natively on anything that can run linux. I like this approach better, because this way I could use it with my own home made gsm hardware (via nano+gsm module+touch lcd+battery), or even install the android environment as an application under openmoko. The only thing preventing people from building linux based phones is the lack of gsm services (like sms and mms handing in thunderbird or a dialer with proper contact lists).

    They could only blow their chance is by keeping the runtime environment closed and only licensing it to device manufacturers. I don’t know if they open up these subsystem too, but the current sdk doesn’t have them in source form.

    Like

  105. Ryan (comment 14) has it exactly right. This is Apple vs. EverybodyElse all over again. Apple goes first, big hype, and the trendy types all buy. But in the end it is the less fancy, more open platforms that win.

    Might not be perfect, but many developers will see this as an opportunity, and much more innovation will come from Android than the iPhone. One caveat, we have to see it running on some real hardware.

    Like

  106. Ryan (comment 14) has it exactly right. This is Apple vs. EverybodyElse all over again. Apple goes first, big hype, and the trendy types all buy. But in the end it is the less fancy, more open platforms that win.

    Might not be perfect, but many developers will see this as an opportunity, and much more innovation will come from Android than the iPhone. One caveat, we have to see it running on some real hardware.

    Like

  107. I think that they’re doing what Microsoft did with the Zune. Everyone knew that Apple had a corner on the mp3 player market with the ipod. Microsoft was just looking to dent its market share and really expand in other avenues. I’m guessing Google is doing much of the same. Let’s face it, the iPhone is the only really game out there, and everyone knows it.

    Like

  108. I think that they’re doing what Microsoft did with the Zune. Everyone knew that Apple had a corner on the mp3 player market with the ipod. Microsoft was just looking to dent its market share and really expand in other avenues. I’m guessing Google is doing much of the same. Let’s face it, the iPhone is the only really game out there, and everyone knows it.

    Like

  109. Hey Robert! Android does not have to beat the iPhone. I don’t find it earth moving… but we are spoilt brats. Android offers lots of possibilities to easily develop new stuff. I was disappointed with Google last week when they announced this. All the hype about a gPhone and we end up with a platform. But Google are being clever offering $10M in prizes. This could lift the level of android applications very quickly.

    I don’t have an iPhone, I’m not in a ‘state’ to get a phone that has Android. But it might change. I think the biggest problem will be the greedy telco’s.

    Like

  110. Hey Robert! Android does not have to beat the iPhone. I don’t find it earth moving… but we are spoilt brats. Android offers lots of possibilities to easily develop new stuff. I was disappointed with Google last week when they announced this. All the hype about a gPhone and we end up with a platform. But Google are being clever offering $10M in prizes. This could lift the level of android applications very quickly.

    I don’t have an iPhone, I’m not in a ‘state’ to get a phone that has Android. But it might change. I think the biggest problem will be the greedy telco’s.

    Like

  111. I call no-fair:D

    Comparing Android to the Iphone- Isn’t that a little like comparing Winamp to the Zune?

    It’s not fair to judge a software platform by the interface of the hardware it’s running on.

    There are several reasons I’d take an Android-Powered mobile over an iPhone-

    1) The SDK – That “don’t believe it till you see it” think mentioned above goes both ways. Apple promised an SDK for the iphone a long time ago, and waffled with “web sites are your SDK.” They’re not. They might do it again, too. And even if Apple produces one next year, it’ll be from all the pressure they’ve received, not from a genuine attitude of thinking of their device as a platform to allow others to build on.

    2) I’m a developer. I understand that puts me in the “not normal” set of consumers, but honestly, from a programming perspective, Android looks like a playground I can carry around in my pocket. And I really love Google API’s- The documentation may not be an exhilerating read, but be serious. It’s an API. And in Google’s case, as a general rule, you can create wonders with them.

    3)Choice (that seperation between phone & platform comes in, here). If I want an Android-powered phone on a 3G network, I pick a provider with a 3G network, and a model that supports it. If I want an Android phone with GPS, I pick a model with GPS. If I want an iPhone with 3G, I wait. If I want GPS, I either risk bricking the iPhone to install something that fakes GPS based on celltower location, or I wait.

    4)Developer community- The barrier of entry into developing for the iPhone is vastly larger than for Android, so naturally, I think more people are going to develop for Android. More developers -> more software -> greater presence in developer forums/communities -> better software. That’s just how I see it rollin’.

    -Alex

    Like

  112. I call no-fair:D

    Comparing Android to the Iphone- Isn’t that a little like comparing Winamp to the Zune?

    It’s not fair to judge a software platform by the interface of the hardware it’s running on.

    There are several reasons I’d take an Android-Powered mobile over an iPhone-

    1) The SDK – That “don’t believe it till you see it” think mentioned above goes both ways. Apple promised an SDK for the iphone a long time ago, and waffled with “web sites are your SDK.” They’re not. They might do it again, too. And even if Apple produces one next year, it’ll be from all the pressure they’ve received, not from a genuine attitude of thinking of their device as a platform to allow others to build on.

    2) I’m a developer. I understand that puts me in the “not normal” set of consumers, but honestly, from a programming perspective, Android looks like a playground I can carry around in my pocket. And I really love Google API’s- The documentation may not be an exhilerating read, but be serious. It’s an API. And in Google’s case, as a general rule, you can create wonders with them.

    3)Choice (that seperation between phone & platform comes in, here). If I want an Android-powered phone on a 3G network, I pick a provider with a 3G network, and a model that supports it. If I want an Android phone with GPS, I pick a model with GPS. If I want an iPhone with 3G, I wait. If I want GPS, I either risk bricking the iPhone to install something that fakes GPS based on celltower location, or I wait.

    4)Developer community- The barrier of entry into developing for the iPhone is vastly larger than for Android, so naturally, I think more people are going to develop for Android. More developers -> more software -> greater presence in developer forums/communities -> better software. That’s just how I see it rollin’.

    -Alex

    Like

  113. Sure, the video was unimpressive, but I think you should hold off judgment until the thing is actually released. Who knows–maybe they’ll catch on to your opinions (and those of many others around the internet) and make appropriate changes.

    Like

  114. Sure, the video was unimpressive, but I think you should hold off judgment until the thing is actually released. Who knows–maybe they’ll catch on to your opinions (and those of many others around the internet) and make appropriate changes.

    Like

  115. #1 To be a success, Android does not have to kill the iPhone.
    #2 I doubt much of anything is going to get people who already have an iPhone to give up their iPhone – Two Year Contracts tend to have that affect on people.
    #3 If I just spent $300 – $600 on a phone, I’m not even going to bother looking at other phones for a while, regardless of contracts or not.
    #4 You are comparing something that is software only (Android) to a software/hardware package (iPhone). I’m sure there will be a good number of phones that run Android that will be utter crap. And, then there will be some phones that run Android that will kick the iPhone’s butt. It’s like comparing a Mac and Windows. You don’t compare the operating system to the computer. (Mac comes with iLife and a built-in camera and bluetooth – Windows comes with a DVD.) No, you compare a given Mac (MacBook Pro 15″) with a given laptop running Windows (Dell XPS with Windows Vista Ultimate, or whatever). Trying to compare what is, in practical terms, vaporware (not that it doesn’t exist, but the final product does not yet exist) to the hold-it-in-your-hands iPhone – is not only unfair – it’s pointless.

    Like

  116. #1 To be a success, Android does not have to kill the iPhone.
    #2 I doubt much of anything is going to get people who already have an iPhone to give up their iPhone – Two Year Contracts tend to have that affect on people.
    #3 If I just spent $300 – $600 on a phone, I’m not even going to bother looking at other phones for a while, regardless of contracts or not.
    #4 You are comparing something that is software only (Android) to a software/hardware package (iPhone). I’m sure there will be a good number of phones that run Android that will be utter crap. And, then there will be some phones that run Android that will kick the iPhone’s butt. It’s like comparing a Mac and Windows. You don’t compare the operating system to the computer. (Mac comes with iLife and a built-in camera and bluetooth – Windows comes with a DVD.) No, you compare a given Mac (MacBook Pro 15″) with a given laptop running Windows (Dell XPS with Windows Vista Ultimate, or whatever). Trying to compare what is, in practical terms, vaporware (not that it doesn’t exist, but the final product does not yet exist) to the hold-it-in-your-hands iPhone – is not only unfair – it’s pointless.

    Like

  117. “Rhuggle is a bunch of boy scouts with no den-master! They are just
    a bunch of spoiled rich kids on a perpetual holiday, no order or
    discipline. They only exist in that I allow it, I find them amusing, it’s
    like watching a house on fire or some other tragedy, you know it’s
    repulsive but you just can’t look away!”
    The reporters were taking in my words like Saki, they just couldn’t
    get enough! So I decided to throw them one more bone!
    “I have to go now, but since I’m on Rhuggle, let me say this about
    this ‘Android” thing they announced: It is just like the rest of Google
    ..ahem, I mean Rhuggle, IT ONLY EXIST ON PAPER! Don’t fall for this
    vaporware, rumors, fake-half-baked hype that they peddle!”

    Like

  118. “Rhuggle is a bunch of boy scouts with no den-master! They are just
    a bunch of spoiled rich kids on a perpetual holiday, no order or
    discipline. They only exist in that I allow it, I find them amusing, it’s
    like watching a house on fire or some other tragedy, you know it’s
    repulsive but you just can’t look away!”
    The reporters were taking in my words like Saki, they just couldn’t
    get enough! So I decided to throw them one more bone!
    “I have to go now, but since I’m on Rhuggle, let me say this about
    this ‘Android” thing they announced: It is just like the rest of Google
    ..ahem, I mean Rhuggle, IT ONLY EXIST ON PAPER! Don’t fall for this
    vaporware, rumors, fake-half-baked hype that they peddle!”

    Like

  119. Have you noticed how google android looks like iPhone operational system?
    Compare the functions shown in the videos below:
    weshow.com/us/p/23362/google_android_demo
    weshow.com/us/p/18795/iphone_home_made_review
    What do you think? Will google bring iPhone power to everyone who can’t afford apple products? That would be great 😀

    Like

  120. Have you noticed how google android looks like iPhone operational system?
    Compare the functions shown in the videos below:
    weshow.com/us/p/23362/google_android_demo
    weshow.com/us/p/18795/iphone_home_made_review
    What do you think? Will google bring iPhone power to everyone who can’t afford apple products? That would be great 😀

    Like

  121. God I love the myopic Apple fanatic world view. Anything anyone does that is not exactly the same as what Apple does automatically sucks, and anything that might remotely resemble something that Apple does is a blatant copy. You folks really need to get some perspective.

    Like

  122. God I love the myopic Apple fanatic world view. Anything anyone does that is not exactly the same as what Apple does automatically sucks, and anything that might remotely resemble something that Apple does is a blatant copy. You folks really need to get some perspective.

    Like

  123. >It was released without a personal approach.

    Did you want Sergei to give you a handjob?

    >If you want my support for your platform I need to be >able to use it and show it to my friends.

    Of course. Because that’s what tech is all about, making some geek look cool with his other geek friends.

    >The UI looks confused.

    You means all phones on the Android platform will look like this?

    >Heck, I don’t know of a single developer who
    >has had his/her hands on Android.

    Wait, Android is not a platform? Its the name of a phone?
    Developers on the other hand have their hands on the SDK.
    What’s that you say?

    >Google needs to get atomic videos.
    You dont like the editing of the video?

    >Google’s PR comes across as “only caring about big >bangs.
    Yes, Apple and Microsoft’s PR is understated.

    >They also kept me from using my video camera during >the press call
    Waaaaaaaaaaaaaaaah!!
    Waaaaaaaaaaah!! I need my mommy….
    When Apple does one of these they have no rules whatsoever. None.

    >It looks too much like a poor copy of the iPhone.
    The main reason they should never have used a demo.
    Some lame brained writers might think THIS is the phone instead of a platform on which different companies will be able to build different models of phone.

    >But what do I know

    From the look of it, very little.

    More like the judgement and reasoning of my 12 year old nieces who like things that look cool.

    #20 is right on the money:
    >Saying your not going to switch from the iPhone to >Android is like saying your not trading in your BMW >for a Z Platform. Product != platform.

    T-r-y t-o c-o-m-p-r-e-h-e-n-d t-h-i-s.

    RK

    Like

  124. >It was released without a personal approach.

    Did you want Sergei to give you a handjob?

    >If you want my support for your platform I need to be >able to use it and show it to my friends.

    Of course. Because that’s what tech is all about, making some geek look cool with his other geek friends.

    >The UI looks confused.

    You means all phones on the Android platform will look like this?

    >Heck, I don’t know of a single developer who
    >has had his/her hands on Android.

    Wait, Android is not a platform? Its the name of a phone?
    Developers on the other hand have their hands on the SDK.
    What’s that you say?

    >Google needs to get atomic videos.
    You dont like the editing of the video?

    >Google’s PR comes across as “only caring about big >bangs.
    Yes, Apple and Microsoft’s PR is understated.

    >They also kept me from using my video camera during >the press call
    Waaaaaaaaaaaaaaaah!!
    Waaaaaaaaaaah!! I need my mommy….
    When Apple does one of these they have no rules whatsoever. None.

    >It looks too much like a poor copy of the iPhone.
    The main reason they should never have used a demo.
    Some lame brained writers might think THIS is the phone instead of a platform on which different companies will be able to build different models of phone.

    >But what do I know

    From the look of it, very little.

    More like the judgement and reasoning of my 12 year old nieces who like things that look cool.

    #20 is right on the money:
    >Saying your not going to switch from the iPhone to >Android is like saying your not trading in your BMW >for a Z Platform. Product != platform.

    T-r-y t-o c-o-m-p-r-e-h-e-n-d t-h-i-s.

    RK

    Like

  125. You could be very wrong this time Robert.
    What Google has presented so far is a very impressive mobile platform. Yes betamax won out against VHS, but the innovation that has gone in to Android from what I’ve seen makes me think this thing could have legs.
    I’m a developer, I enjoyed the videos, I wanted longer videos and more information.

    Like

  126. You could be very wrong this time Robert.
    What Google has presented so far is a very impressive mobile platform. Yes betamax won out against VHS, but the innovation that has gone in to Android from what I’ve seen makes me think this thing could have legs.
    I’m a developer, I enjoyed the videos, I wanted longer videos and more information.

    Like

  127. You are all a bunch of stupids that just blog first before understand what is going on.

    Andriod SDK is mean for Developers not for end users.

    The demos and videos are just for demostration for DEVELOPERS of what kind of things the platform can do. As we have a compass, GPS, USB, 3D hardware graphics acceleration, Touching, keyboard and much more.

    The real phones and marketing, that will depend of Operators and device manufacturers as Motorola, AT&t so on.

    Google just gives the Software stack for get one and only one universal platform for mobile devices.

    Google what gets from this?, this platform runs webkit and is very integrated with internet features so Google will continue doing what they do best ADS as we can find now in a desktop PC. Google win money with ADS and advertsiments in the internet.

    Google doesnt win money with Andriod directly, the device manfucaturers and operators are the winners of what they will build with this Software Stack called Andriod.

    Like

  128. You are all a bunch of stupids that just blog first before understand what is going on.

    Andriod SDK is mean for Developers not for end users.

    The demos and videos are just for demostration for DEVELOPERS of what kind of things the platform can do. As we have a compass, GPS, USB, 3D hardware graphics acceleration, Touching, keyboard and much more.

    The real phones and marketing, that will depend of Operators and device manufacturers as Motorola, AT&t so on.

    Google just gives the Software stack for get one and only one universal platform for mobile devices.

    Google what gets from this?, this platform runs webkit and is very integrated with internet features so Google will continue doing what they do best ADS as we can find now in a desktop PC. Google win money with ADS and advertsiments in the internet.

    Google doesnt win money with Andriod directly, the device manfucaturers and operators are the winners of what they will build with this Software Stack called Andriod.

    Like

  129. “They didn’t talk about ONE thing that the iPhone doesn’t do.”

    Well google.com didn’t do anything that yahoo.com didn’t do…it didn’t even do a fraction of what it did. I don’t think anyone would of predicted the success of Google if they had seen an early version of it (they would of just compared features).

    In general, it is actually very difficult to predict the success of disruptive technologies. Your way of comparing feature-for-feature is the non-disruptive way. Apple may be happy having 5% of a market (due to wanting to control everything), but someobody has to do something about the other 95%.

    Like

  130. “They didn’t talk about ONE thing that the iPhone doesn’t do.”

    Well google.com didn’t do anything that yahoo.com didn’t do…it didn’t even do a fraction of what it did. I don’t think anyone would of predicted the success of Google if they had seen an early version of it (they would of just compared features).

    In general, it is actually very difficult to predict the success of disruptive technologies. Your way of comparing feature-for-feature is the non-disruptive way. Apple may be happy having 5% of a market (due to wanting to control everything), but someobody has to do something about the other 95%.

    Like

  131. I’m fascinated. How can you ciriticize something, that has JUST been released? And what’s more, released only for developers?

    You know what? Let’s talk about this in spring 2008…

    Like

  132. I’m fascinated. How can you ciriticize something, that has JUST been released? And what’s more, released only for developers?

    You know what? Let’s talk about this in spring 2008…

    Like

  133. Author is so not getting it; this will bring all the OTHER phones up to par with the iPhone… consumer wins

    Like

  134. Author is so not getting it; this will bring all the OTHER phones up to par with the iPhone… consumer wins

    Like

  135. It may be too early to call Google a dud in this area.

    In 18 years in the IT industry, mostly on the SMB business development side, the one thing I’ve learned: Never bet against the 800-pound gorilla.

    Of course over time, 800-pound gorillas in an industry can turn into 800mg mouses (remember when IBM dominated the PC World, when HP basically owned the laser printer market, when Lotus 123 ruled the finance World, etc.).

    But I still wouldn’t count Google “out” at this point.

    They have a VERY large installed user “base”.

    Like

  136. It may be too early to call Google a dud in this area.

    In 18 years in the IT industry, mostly on the SMB business development side, the one thing I’ve learned: Never bet against the 800-pound gorilla.

    Of course over time, 800-pound gorillas in an industry can turn into 800mg mouses (remember when IBM dominated the PC World, when HP basically owned the laser printer market, when Lotus 123 ruled the finance World, etc.).

    But I still wouldn’t count Google “out” at this point.

    They have a VERY large installed user “base”.

    Like

  137. I agree with Robert, but from a more technical analysis. If I put together a bunch of engineers and asked them to put spec a new OS (of sorts) utilizing mostly open source components, this is what I would expect. Choosing a variant of embedded Linux is straightforward, since it is open source and the alternative is a commercial RTOS. The VM/core library approach is also nice, as it delivers somewhat of a Hardware Abstraction Layer for developers to “write once, run on any Android” handset. But the numerous managers, layers, not to mention the general approach to handling GUI API which looks like the original (if not current) OS X and Windows graphics system shows little vision towards a “next gen” embedded device. The eventual iPhone SDK may allow some innovation in an app’s GUI, but it goes without saying that the user interaction/ interface will be limited in some ways to Apple’s “Look and Feel.” This is a good thing, and why Apple products are generally easy to use. The Android approach seems to invite all forms of GUI which will drive cell phone users crazy. It also ignores the value of ‘branding’ by cell phone manufacturers and service providers. By placing a simple abstraction layer in the architecture, any app could fit in with, say, a Nokia phone using T-Mobile versus a Sony phone from Verizon, and it could all be done dynamically under the covers without requirements on writing apps themselves.
    But the main point is that this looks like a desktop OS – out of the chute it is already too large and multi-layered. We are talking about embedded devices, even allowing for some level of scaling up to ultra portable computing devices. Since we are talking Google, they will get some manufacturers to dip their toes in the water, and probably some of the cell carriers. But even if Google can get this OS to perform adequately on a mobile device, I would conjecture that by the time the manufacturers and carriers are done paring it down, it will not be as much of a ‘platform’ as Google would like to think.

    Like

  138. I agree with Robert, but from a more technical analysis. If I put together a bunch of engineers and asked them to put spec a new OS (of sorts) utilizing mostly open source components, this is what I would expect. Choosing a variant of embedded Linux is straightforward, since it is open source and the alternative is a commercial RTOS. The VM/core library approach is also nice, as it delivers somewhat of a Hardware Abstraction Layer for developers to “write once, run on any Android” handset. But the numerous managers, layers, not to mention the general approach to handling GUI API which looks like the original (if not current) OS X and Windows graphics system shows little vision towards a “next gen” embedded device. The eventual iPhone SDK may allow some innovation in an app’s GUI, but it goes without saying that the user interaction/ interface will be limited in some ways to Apple’s “Look and Feel.” This is a good thing, and why Apple products are generally easy to use. The Android approach seems to invite all forms of GUI which will drive cell phone users crazy. It also ignores the value of ‘branding’ by cell phone manufacturers and service providers. By placing a simple abstraction layer in the architecture, any app could fit in with, say, a Nokia phone using T-Mobile versus a Sony phone from Verizon, and it could all be done dynamically under the covers without requirements on writing apps themselves.
    But the main point is that this looks like a desktop OS – out of the chute it is already too large and multi-layered. We are talking about embedded devices, even allowing for some level of scaling up to ultra portable computing devices. Since we are talking Google, they will get some manufacturers to dip their toes in the water, and probably some of the cell carriers. But even if Google can get this OS to perform adequately on a mobile device, I would conjecture that by the time the manufacturers and carriers are done paring it down, it will not be as much of a ‘platform’ as Google would like to think.

    Like

  139. Has anyone thought about Google’s larger plan, and its big brother effect? I see 2 key strategies they’re probably considering:

    1. Get google’s javascript on as many web sites and web interactions as possible. cookie everything. Know what the world is doing. Know what you are doing. Think about the whole point of adsense, gmail, google reader, and web analytics (look for urchin mention in view source of many websites). “Just paste this tiny bit of javascript into your site..” Doubleclick would bring way to much power to extend what they’ve already done.

    2. Get folks to use the google phone and use speech recognition to know what folks are talking about. insert relevant advertisements at the end of the call. Notice how well their 411Goog works? Remember that old search speech recognition tool they once had up?

    The possibilities are getting a bit scary, no?

    Like

  140. Has anyone thought about Google’s larger plan, and its big brother effect? I see 2 key strategies they’re probably considering:

    1. Get google’s javascript on as many web sites and web interactions as possible. cookie everything. Know what the world is doing. Know what you are doing. Think about the whole point of adsense, gmail, google reader, and web analytics (look for urchin mention in view source of many websites). “Just paste this tiny bit of javascript into your site..” Doubleclick would bring way to much power to extend what they’ve already done.

    2. Get folks to use the google phone and use speech recognition to know what folks are talking about. insert relevant advertisements at the end of the call. Notice how well their 411Goog works? Remember that old search speech recognition tool they once had up?

    The possibilities are getting a bit scary, no?

    Like

  141. I have been playing with it and have applied for a job with a company that is planning on using the platform. It’s real and it’s out there.

    Like

  142. I have been playing with it and have applied for a job with a company that is planning on using the platform. It’s real and it’s out there.

    Like

  143. Just wait and see how the Android is going to be a killer app for Mobiles.
    Open Handset Alliance is not a kitty party !

    Quoting Sergey Brin.. “The best applications are yet to be made”.

    Like

  144. Just wait and see how the Android is going to be a killer app for Mobiles.
    Open Handset Alliance is not a kitty party !

    Quoting Sergey Brin.. “The best applications are yet to be made”.

    Like

  145. I like your videos and opinions, but you are too negative now. Maybe you’ve traveled too much with the bus lately? “Ok that was just mean, but it had to be said.”
    Just tell me, who is giving developers (free) platform to make applications for phones (not some sexy reservoir iPhone land), I mean phones for normal people? Ok, this video is boring, but video on OHA with childrens is not boring. Maybe you didn’t get it – it’s freedom. I’ve asked my children and my wife what would be their magic phone like and they gave me some crazy use cases. I’ve looked at android apis and you know what – it’s possible to do it. You are just too negative…

    Like

  146. I like your videos and opinions, but you are too negative now. Maybe you’ve traveled too much with the bus lately? “Ok that was just mean, but it had to be said.”
    Just tell me, who is giving developers (free) platform to make applications for phones (not some sexy reservoir iPhone land), I mean phones for normal people? Ok, this video is boring, but video on OHA with childrens is not boring. Maybe you didn’t get it – it’s freedom. I’ve asked my children and my wife what would be their magic phone like and they gave me some crazy use cases. I’ve looked at android apis and you know what – it’s possible to do it. You are just too negative…

    Like

  147. In the late 1980s, I remember emailing to Linus and his frustration that people weren’t taking his new Linus project seriously.

    They couldn’t understand why anyone would move from Unix or MS-DOS to use such a clunky operating system, even if it was open source.

    And in the mid-1990s, people pooh-poohed the idea of Java.

    The key is that this new Android platform is just starting. We need to avoid the pitfall of presupposing what an open-source software’s future will be by how it works at this very moment.

    Odds are the Android of the future will not resemble even remotely what is in the above video. And, odds are, it’s child or one of its children will be on almost all of our phones within 5-10 years in some form.

    Like

  148. In the late 1980s, I remember emailing to Linus and his frustration that people weren’t taking his new Linus project seriously.

    They couldn’t understand why anyone would move from Unix or MS-DOS to use such a clunky operating system, even if it was open source.

    And in the mid-1990s, people pooh-poohed the idea of Java.

    The key is that this new Android platform is just starting. We need to avoid the pitfall of presupposing what an open-source software’s future will be by how it works at this very moment.

    Odds are the Android of the future will not resemble even remotely what is in the above video. And, odds are, it’s child or one of its children will be on almost all of our phones within 5-10 years in some form.

    Like

  149. In the video the speaker says that the ui will be replaced completely. Please watch the video and then make a comment about something that you don’t know about.
    To all people that make ui comments:
    Are you 5 year old kids that when they read a book, they look for the pictures. and when they don’t find any pictures, they say the book “sucks”?
    (when i say a book, i don’t mean a comic book.)

    any person that has any computer science education at all can tell you that anything that is still in the development process doesn’t have a good ui. so respect that. and don’t go blobing around like a mad monkey that sdk is bad untill you actually installed it and created a simple program with it. and i don’t mean hello world.

    To all people that say: “i am not gonna touch it until it comes out on a real device…” – Be my guest! from my experience it is better to learn the break-through technologies fast to stay ahead of gray faceless mob. so meanwhile you sit and wait, i will be learning. when finally it will strike you and gphone will be handed to you on the silver plater, i will be the one reading your resume.
    You say you don’t believe it is not going to work? Why not???!!! What is so unbelievably difficult to understand that an open mobile platform gives you a chance to make the transition into the wireless age of small factor devices? Do you think google will just let that one slide through if it fails the first time? Do you think it will just say: “No, after buying a company and waisting 10000000 for android challenge and making fools out of ourselves we will just create an ugly, un-functional, featureless device because we are not really a mobile company. we are just a search engine that does doodles every christmas…” Yeah right…

    Also to a guy that thinks Sergey Brin needs a haircut and a speech coach…
    First Sergey is probably sorry he assaulted your royal ears.
    Second, it is not about wearing a suite like a lot of corporate monkeys out there. i wonder what you would look like if you had a multi-billion dollar business? Oh i am sorry you don’t have one, so i guess we will never know.

    Like

  150. In the video the speaker says that the ui will be replaced completely. Please watch the video and then make a comment about something that you don’t know about.
    To all people that make ui comments:
    Are you 5 year old kids that when they read a book, they look for the pictures. and when they don’t find any pictures, they say the book “sucks”?
    (when i say a book, i don’t mean a comic book.)

    any person that has any computer science education at all can tell you that anything that is still in the development process doesn’t have a good ui. so respect that. and don’t go blobing around like a mad monkey that sdk is bad untill you actually installed it and created a simple program with it. and i don’t mean hello world.

    To all people that say: “i am not gonna touch it until it comes out on a real device…” – Be my guest! from my experience it is better to learn the break-through technologies fast to stay ahead of gray faceless mob. so meanwhile you sit and wait, i will be learning. when finally it will strike you and gphone will be handed to you on the silver plater, i will be the one reading your resume.
    You say you don’t believe it is not going to work? Why not???!!! What is so unbelievably difficult to understand that an open mobile platform gives you a chance to make the transition into the wireless age of small factor devices? Do you think google will just let that one slide through if it fails the first time? Do you think it will just say: “No, after buying a company and waisting 10000000 for android challenge and making fools out of ourselves we will just create an ugly, un-functional, featureless device because we are not really a mobile company. we are just a search engine that does doodles every christmas…” Yeah right…

    Also to a guy that thinks Sergey Brin needs a haircut and a speech coach…
    First Sergey is probably sorry he assaulted your royal ears.
    Second, it is not about wearing a suite like a lot of corporate monkeys out there. i wonder what you would look like if you had a multi-billion dollar business? Oh i am sorry you don’t have one, so i guess we will never know.

    Like

  151. Pingback: Go to Android
  152. Horrible video, I agree. Seems like Google is just bad at PR.

    On the other hand, I don’t think Google should be the ones doing the publicizing for android. Rather, it should be done by the phone manufacturers and service providers, as they have more experience and a better infrastructure in this regard.

    And that leads me to the point of this post. Google was advertising to developers. Those people who are going to make android in to a viable competitor in terms of functionality.

    There is time enough later for promotional stunts and gimmicks. What needed to get done asap was the developer involvement. And in this respect Google succeeded.

    Like

  153. Horrible video, I agree. Seems like Google is just bad at PR.

    On the other hand, I don’t think Google should be the ones doing the publicizing for android. Rather, it should be done by the phone manufacturers and service providers, as they have more experience and a better infrastructure in this regard.

    And that leads me to the point of this post. Google was advertising to developers. Those people who are going to make android in to a viable competitor in terms of functionality.

    There is time enough later for promotional stunts and gimmicks. What needed to get done asap was the developer involvement. And in this respect Google succeeded.

    Like

  154. I think the iPhone can credit much of it’s success to the massive following that Apple seem to have at the moment. It borders on a cult following at this time.

    Google are going to have to work very hard to try and compete with that. That said I believe that Google are really going to do a Microsoft on this one. No doubt they will release the software with bugs and we’ll have folk calling Android the next Vista. 😛

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  155. I think the iPhone can credit much of it’s success to the massive following that Apple seem to have at the moment. It borders on a cult following at this time.

    Google are going to have to work very hard to try and compete with that. That said I believe that Google are really going to do a Microsoft on this one. No doubt they will release the software with bugs and we’ll have folk calling Android the next Vista. 😛

    Like

  156. I suspect the big news will be when Android is ported to small notebook computers like the ASUS Eee PC. Imagine an Eee PC with a 10 inch high-resolution touch screen and 3G mobile phone capabilities and include a Bluetooth headset. What an awesome combination! Great for the business traveler on the road.

    I’m really looking forward to Google getting some success with the Android platform so as to create a bit of competition with Apple’s iPhone. I really hope Android plays avi and other video format files including Flash.

    Like

  157. I suspect the big news will be when Android is ported to small notebook computers like the ASUS Eee PC. Imagine an Eee PC with a 10 inch high-resolution touch screen and 3G mobile phone capabilities and include a Bluetooth headset. What an awesome combination! Great for the business traveler on the road.

    I’m really looking forward to Google getting some success with the Android platform so as to create a bit of competition with Apple’s iPhone. I really hope Android plays avi and other video format files including Flash.

    Like

  158. Hey Scoble, don't you look like a clown! Look where Android is now and where they're heading.It's a pity an iTard fanboi like yourself has no vision. Maybe you should just stay at home wanking off to your precious Ifone playing World of Warcraft with your ibuddies.

    Like

  159. Hey Scoble, don't you look like a clown! Look where Android is now and where they're heading.It's a pity an iTard fanboi like yourself has no vision. Maybe you should just stay at home wanking off to your precious Ifone playing World of Warcraft with your ibuddies.

    Like

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