This is going to be great for mobile development- a real shot across the bow of the success iPhone has had to date. The proof will be in the devices actually hitting consumer hands and being good. No one asked the killer question at the press conference- what’s the battery life?
HTC G1
Single touch screen interface (not multi touch like iPhone, but pretty good)
Slide out keyboard
Lots of Google/search integration throughout the device, including hard search key on keyboard
Form factor similar to iPhone, but a lot less sexy
Customer
T-mobile will be doing their biggest marketing program ever for a device (prob in October)
Target customer: appeal to all users, primarily a consumer device
in UK in November, rest of Europe 2009
Pricing and Availability
In Stores Oct 22nd
$179
2 data plans (voice plan required)
$25 unlimited web, limited messaging
$35 unlimited web, unlimited messaging
Sim locked to T-mobile
Applications
Google Maps including street view
Instant messaging, with address book integrated presence
WebKit based browser, renders pretty much all web pages
Read PDF, Word, and Excel documents
No desktop application, all syncing over the air in the background
Demo Amazon store for music (alternative to iTunes) - doesn’t support DRM locked iTunes music
No Skype support
Email
Gmail is push, IMAP support is pull
No Exchange support, relying on 3rd party
And they have released the source:
http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/android_goes_opensource.php
http://source.android.com/
The Apache license is not a copyleft license, allowing proprietary derivative works. It's a world-domination play that is great for both ISVs and big carriers alike.
Posted by: Ben Frueh | October 21, 2008 at 05:44 PM