The Googe Phone And Android
Google recently acquired Finnish business Jaiku that carried several Short Message Service (SMS) Patents, that is the technology that enables the exchanging of brief messages between mobile telephones.
Google currently has a 29 percent share of the US market above 16% to Yahoo according to internet marketing research firm eMarketer, and would wish nothing more than to master the mobile device market such as mobile telephones, Blackberries and more, including their own GPhone. On this news Google’s stock rose to a colossal $600 per share recently, theorizing that Google’s net income might climb to as steep as 50 percent over last year’s numbers.
In the beginning of November this anticipation was dashed as Google, along with a confederation of mobile phone-related reverse cell phone directory companies, announced its mobile phone undertaking was not for a solitary handset. Alternatively, the business is preparing to develop a platform, or operating system, that will provide better functionality for all cellular phones. The establishment of the Open Handset Alliance (OHA), which includes some industry behemoths such as Motorola, T-Mobile, Samsung and O2’s parent Telephonica, is meeting to backup Google’s venture, named Android.
Android is determined to be the future multi-platform mobile software that is able to function on several different handsets. It hopes to furnish not only an operating system but also key applications and middleware. Several of Google’s hottest applications like GMail and Google Maps already have mobile versions phone owners can run through Java. Android intends to develop applications like this more functional on cell phones but also to supply a cleaner internet experience too.
For those poor few who are just unable to code something in Java (the Android programming language), one of the plethora of different handsets that are obtainable will suffice, since there will also be a wide mixture of features to keep one working.
