Google’s Schmidt Says Chrome & Android Will Remain Separate – But Don’t Be Fooled: Two Years Ago He Confirmed They Will Merge

eric-schmidt

Google’s Eric Schmidt has said Mountain View will keep its two OSes, Android and Chrome, separate after all, according to a Reuters report. Schmidt, who is in India attending an IT event called Big Tent Activate Summit, said the two operating systems will remain separate products but apparently also said there could be more “commonality” between them.

Techmeme editor, @scepticgeek, who was watching the conference livestream, also tweeted Schmidt saying Android and Chrome would be “separate & independent for a long time”:

TechCrunch contacted Google and asked it to confirm whether it plans to keep Chrome and Android separate but Google declined to comment.

What’s most interesting about Schmidt’s comments today is that his words, as reported, seem to contradict comments he made back in February 2011, when he told delegates at the Mobile World Congress tradeshow that Chrome and Android would absolutely converge.

We’re working overtime to get [Chrome & Android] merged in the right way

“We’re working overtime to get those technologies merged in the right way,” he said at the time, but added: “I learned a long time ago, don’t force technology to merge when it’s not ready, wait for the technology to mature to the point when it can be merged.”

In other words: a Chrome-Android merger is inevitable, but also won’t be rushed. So his comments today — about increasing commonality between Chrome and Android — suggest Google is still building a gradual path towards convergence (as Schmidt said it was in 2011).

Rumours that Google’s quasi-desktop OS Chrome and its touch-based mobile OS Android might be about to merge were sparked earlier this month when head of Android, Andy Rubin, was shuffled out to another role within Google — with Sundar Pichai, head of Chrome and apps, taking over. Pichai did not leave his existing duties but rather added the Android brief to his Chrome and apps portfolio, suggesting a unifying impetus for the job changes.

Chrome and Android ‘remaining separate and independent for a long time’ has much the same emphasis as Schmidt’s comments from two years ago — when he said they would merge, ultimately. Exactly what he meant by trying to ensure they are “merged in the right way” is up for debate — whatever it means, two years of Google working overtime still apparently hasn’t created those sought after, clement conditions. (It’s likely Google needs to wait for the market to mesh with its mobile centric vision — so growing the Android platform and expanding its reach is one way Mountain View may have been “working overtime”.)

Make no mistake though: the ultimate merger of Chrome and Android is inevitably since the differences between hardware categories are being eroded. Chrome OS was announced in mid 2009 — at a time when netbooks were riding high. Remember them? The launch of the iPad in 2010 created the tablet category afresh and tablets quickly pulled the rug out from under mini laptops, and started eroding the desktop computing market too — putting the emphasis squarely on touch and mobile computing. And from there it’s but a short hop to gestures and wearables.

All of which underlines that ultimately having two separate OSes — one mobile and one quasi-mobile — makes no sense for Google in the long run. It’s not a question of if Chrome and Android will merge — the big question is how soon it can be made to happen.

Google Chrome’s World Wide Maze turns your favorite website into 3D game for your phone (video)

Chrome's World Wide Maze lets you turn your favorite website into a 3D maze, navigated by your phone video

Google’s latest Chrome experiment is a marble maze game that binds your smartphone to your PC through those shareable tabs. Once you’ve opened the same tab on both platforms, you’ll be put in control of a metallic Nexus Q lookalike, steered by the accelerometers baked into your smartphone — as well as power and jump buttons. Better still, there’s (arguably) an infinite number of levels to tackle, with the experiment transforming your favorite sites into a multi-stage mazes. You’ll need a phone that’s running at least iOS 5.0 or Android 4.0 to make the connection. Take it for a cautious spin at the link below.

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Via: Engadget Japan

Source: Chrome World Wide Maze

Chromebooks from Acer, HP and Samsung heading to six new countries

Chromebooks from Acer, HP and Samsung heading to six new countries

If Chromebooks from Acer, HP and Samsung have struck your fancy but haven’t been available in your country, your fortune might have just changed. Google’s proclaimed that Chrome OS laptops from the trio will see begin rolling out to folks in Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Ireland and the Netherlands. Not only is Mountain View expanding its laptop initiative’s international horizons, but it’s bringing them to more than 1,000 Best Buy stores too, roughly 500 more than previously carried them. Ready to snatch one of the notebooks? Hit the source links to get crackin’.

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Source: Google (1), (2), (3)

The Weekly Roundup for 03.11.2013

The Weekly Roundup for 12032012

You might say the week is never really done in consumer technology news. Your workweek, however, hopefully draws to a close at some point. This is the Weekly Roundup on Engadget, a quick peek back at the top headlines for the past 7 days — all handpicked by the editors here at the site. Click on through the break, and enjoy.

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Switched On: Chrome on the range

Each week Ross Rubin contributes Switched On, a column about consumer technology.

DNP Switched On Chrome on the range

If Chrome OS didn’t start out with an inferiority complex living in the shadow of the massive adoption of its cousin Android, and with Eric Schmidt dismissing the hardware that would run it as cheap and interchangeable, the hardware companies that were early to adopt it didn’t help matters. Chrome OS arrived on devices that weren’t priced competitively against then-popular netbooks.

Since then, though, the Chrome hardware story has been on a steady upswing. Thanks to Acer, Chromebooks broke the $200 price point. Thanks to Samsung, they made the leap to the ARM architecture, enabling longer battery life in a thin form factor. And thanks to HP and Lenovo, Chromebooks have joined the portfolios of two of the biggest names in corporate computing. While it may be nowhere near Android’s scale in terms of overall devices, Chrome OS is now offered by three of 2012’s top Windows PC manufacturers. That is certainly enough to show up on Microsoft’s radar. Into this fray comes the Chromebook Pixel and it has clearly learned from other successful ecosystems.

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Add to Wunderlist extension brings one-click web clipping to your to-do list

Add to Wunderlist extension brings oneclick web clipping to your todo list

Wunderlist users rejoice! Your favorite to-do list just gained a major new feature with the launch of the Add to Wunderlist extension — now available for Chrome, Firefox and Safari. The extension lets you save content from your favorite websites directly into Wunderlist with just one click. It automatically scans web pages for links, email content, prices, descriptions and ratings, clips any highlighted text, then adds it to your list of choice. Web developers also have the option to embed an Add to Wunderlist button directly into websites — the company’s already teamed up with Outlook.com, Gmail, Yahoo! Mail, Amazon, eBay, Twitter, Youtube, IMDb, Asos, Etsy, Wikipedia and Hacker News to enable this functionality. It’s never been easier to be obsessive-compulsive while surfing the web — you just have to follow the source link below.

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Source: 6Wunderkinder

Chrome and Android’s Excellent Collision Course

Andy Rubin left Android, and Chrome and Apps boss Sundar Pichai is taking over. Desktop melts into mobile. It’s a familiar dance, following iOS and OS X and the whole Windows 8 philosophy down the same convergence rabbit hole. But this one is a little different. More »

Andy Rubin writes goodbye letter to Android partners

Andy Rubin leaving the Android team was definitely the most shocking news of the day. He was the person who started the entire movement, from mentioning it to Google back in 2004, to releasing the first Android smartphone, the T-Mobile G1, in October 2008. Now Android is the most widely-used mobile operating system today, with over 1.35 million activations a day, and a total of 750 million Android devices being activated altogether.

Andy Rub writes goodbye later to Android partners

Rubin wrote a heartfelt letter to all of Android’s partners. He jumps back through the successes of Google’s Android since its inception. He comments on how the Open Handset Alliance, which started with only 34 members, now has over 85 members. The team had worked day and night to develop Android and help it reach its milestones at an incredible pace. He emphasized how even with a small team, they were ambitious and able to release Jelly Bean last year, an update that brought significant improvements to Android’s user experience.

Dear friends,

In November of 2007 we announced the Open Handset Alliance with 34 founding members. Today, I’m grateful to the over 85 OHA members who have helped us build Android and drive innovation at such an incredible pace. The Android ecosystem has seen tremendous growth since the launch of the very first Android device in October 2008. The volume and variety of Android devices exceeds even my most optimistic expectations — over 750 million compatible devices and counting!

At its core, Android has always been about openness — the idea that a thousand brains are better than one. Just as the ecosystem has grown, so has our team at Google. I am incredibly proud of the phenomenal group of people that spend their days (and nights) building the Android platform and services. Just look at last year…a lean yet incredibly ambitious team released Jellybean with Google Now, launched Google Play in many languages and countries and collaborated with several partners to build three new Nexus devices to help drive innovation in the ecosystem.

Today, the success of Android combined with the strength of our management team, gives me the confidence to step away from Android and hand over the reins. Going forward, Sundar Pichai will lead Android, in addition to his existing work with Chrome and Apps. Hiroshi Lockheimer — who many of you already know well — plus the rest of the Android leadership team will work closely with all of our partners to advance Android and prepare the platform for new products and services yet to be imagined.

As for me, I am an entrepreneur at heart and now is the right time for me to start a new chapter within Google. I am amazed by what we have accomplished from those early days (not so long ago!), and remain passionate about the power of a simple idea and a shared goal — an open source platform freely available to everyone — to transform computing for people everywhere.

Thank you for your support,

– andy

Rubin will be succeeded by Sundar Pichai, the Senior VP of Google’s Chrome and Apps division. Pichai went forward with Chrome despite all of the doubts he received for creating yet “another browser”, but now it’s one of the most popular web browsers available. Pichai has big shoes to fill, but if anyone in Google could do it, it’d most likely be him. Rubin is off to work on his next big project at Google, and has not stated what it’s going to be yet.

[via The Wall Street Journal]


Andy Rubin writes goodbye letter to Android partners is written by Brian Sin & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Google Replaces Android Boss Andy Rubin With Chrome’s Sundar Pichai

Google Replaces Android Boss Andy Rubin With Chrome’s Sundar Pichai

Andy Rubin is the person most synonymous with Android. He’s been running the mobile operating system since it’s birth and at Google hes grown it into the single most widely used mobile OS in the world. But, as of Wednesday, …

Andy Rubin replaced as Android chief: Chrome merge looks more likely

Google has announced the mother of all shake-ups, with Andy Rubin stepping down from his position as Android lead, and handing over the reins to Sundar Pichai. The news – which will see Rubin “start a new chapter at Google” according to CEO Larry Page – will consolidate Android with Chrome and Apps, the two areas in which Sundar already manages. The transition is only likely to fuel speculation that Google will merge Android and Chrome OS.

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That rumor has been circulating for some time, and while Google has never said never, it’s also been cautious to level expectations as to when it could happen. Speaking to us at Mobile World Congress last month, Android design chief Matias Duarte warned that, though it could happen, we shouldn’t expect it soon.

What, exactly, Andy Rubin will do now is unclear. The exec joined Google in 2005 as senior vice president, bringing with him the work on the open-source Android operating system that he co-founded in 2003. Before that, Rubin co-founded Danger, the company responsible for the proto-smartphone Sidekick.

“Sundar has a talent for creating products that are technically excellent yet easy to use” Page writes, “and he loves a big bet.” The executive “will do a tremendous job doubling down on Android as we work to push the ecosystem forward” Page predicts.

With Google I/O 2013 fast approaching, the stage is being set for a significant shake-up in Android as well as Google’s product range as a whole. We’ll be there to bring you back all the news as it’s announced!


Andy Rubin replaced as Android chief: Chrome merge looks more likely is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.