ASUS says EeeBots are coming, inevitably running Android OS

We’ve seen humanoid bots ranging from the cute to the downright insane with none of them ever coming close to commercial viability, but stick an Eee in front of their name and all bets are off. ASUS, the company that started the seemingly unlikely netbook revolution (sorry, FIC), is about to apply its golden touch to the field of consumer-friendly robotics. Intended to serve as an educational tool for young children to interact with, the EeeBot will be driven by a modified version of the aptly titled Android OS and ASUS is said to be hard at work developing a content and services ecosystem around the hardware. Teased technologies include voice, video and navigation abilities, but we’ll have to wait a while before we see any of it since production won’t begin for another two years.

ASUS says EeeBots are coming, inevitably running Android OS originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 17 Dec 2009 04:09:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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ComScore: iPhone overtakes Windows Mobile use for the first time in US

There are plenty of ways to measure smartphone marketshare. IDC measures units shipped from manufacturers whereas Gartner measures units sold to consumers. Then there’s comScore, the research firm that conducts monthly surveys in the US to measure the total number of devices (and thus operating systems) currently in use. Its latest data is summarized above for the three-month period ending in October. See those yellow lines? If our kindergarten skills haven’t failed us, then this data shows iPhone usage surpassing the once mighty Windows Mobile OS for the very first time. Unfortunately for Microsoft, Google’s Android OS is set to accelerate significantly by the time the February 2010 data rolls in as is WebOS just as soon as Palm can bring its fledgling OS to Verizon’s subscriber base. What’s most troubling to Redmond about this report though, is where we found it: on FierceDeveloper, a site for mobile software developers who will presumably use the data to help determine which platforms deserve their focus. Oh Windows Mobile 7, where are you?

ComScore: iPhone overtakes Windows Mobile use for the first time in US originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 17 Dec 2009 01:08:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Rooted Nook gets Pandora, shot at true happiness

Outside of swearing up a storm on a Twitter app, there aren’t many better ways to announce your presence on a new Android device than the comforting song selections of well-curated Pandora station. A newly rooted Nook with an unlimited supply of free 3G? Even better. The folks behind the rooted Barnes & Noble Nook have now managed to install Pandora onto the device. It took some VNC trickery to get past the login screen, but after that the app works perfectly with the Nook’s touchscreen and even runs in the background while you read. Right now the NookDevs are working on a software unlock so that you don’t have to open the Nook to root it, and are also looking into a Nook app marketplace of sorts. We don’t know how long the fun will last, or what Barnes & Noble’s response will be — so far they’ve been mum on the issue — but the NookDevs claim that based on a perusal of the end user license agreement “there is nothing in there to get us into trouble,” so hopefully we’re looking at the beginnings of a beautiful, awkward friendship between a device maker and hackers. We can dream, right?

Rooted Nook gets Pandora, shot at true happiness originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 16 Dec 2009 22:39:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Google downsizes AndroLib’s Android Market app count by a few grand

A stout 20,000 apps in the Android Market, eh? Not so much, according to none other than Google itself — which, with all due respect to original counter AndroLib — has a little more street cred here, especially when they’re deflating the numbers rather than inflating them. A spokesperson for the company told us this afternoon that “there are currently more than 16,000 free and paid apps in Android Market” without specifying paid-to-free breakdown or differences among regional Markets, so we don’t much basis for figuring out where Google’s number comes from; we’d count it ourselves, but we’ve… uh, we’ve got dinner plans this evening. So until someone can conclusively prove otherwise, we’re going to say that the Market has yet to crack the 20K mark in any region where the Market operates — not to say you can’t find a fair share of goodies among the 16,000 that are out there.

Google downsizes AndroLib’s Android Market app count by a few grand originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 16 Dec 2009 21:09:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Peek Founder Checks Out Nexus One

twitterpeek.jpgTo date, we haven’t exactly been huge fans of the Peek–or its follow-up, the TwitterPeek. That said, Peek founder Amol Sarva is an honest, sharp-eyed tech enthusiast, and one whose opinion we trust.

Today, Sarva posted hands-on impressions of the elusive Nexus One, the so-called Google Phone. He called it “every bit as good a piece of hardware as the Droid or the iPhone,” and said it has a “really great, big touchscreen” and is also thinner than the iPhone.

“Here’s a prediction come true: through relentless iteration, the iPhone-wannabes have now closed the hardware gap entirely. They have cloned it… Apps present the last remaining delta, and I am certain that the open marketplace + the many OEM/many SKU Android strategy will eventually draw every bit as lively a dev community as Apple now holds. Partly because Android like App Store also clones Docomo i-Mode’s monetization and discoverability breakthroughs. Well done, clone droid army.”

Sarva now predicts that Apple must deliver another game-changing new iPhone by 2010, and not just a refresh, if it wants to stay ahead. In short, Sarva declares: “The Droid Clone Wars are over.”

How Carriers and Phone Makers Are Strangling Android (And How Google Could Save It)

The Google Phone could be a ploy to upset the wireless industry, or it could be an expensive niche device. Either way, it’d be a bid to take Android back from the companies that seem hell-bent on destroying it.

Android’s most serious problem right now is fragmentation: with each new phone, it seems, comes a different version of the OS. In theory, these differences are superficial, and come down to handset manufacturers’ and carriers’ custom interfaces, which sit atop a mostly unchanged Android core. In practice, it’s much worse.

Just look at the current top tier of Android devices. The Motorola Droid runs Android 2.0. The HTC MyTouch 3G and G1 on T-Mobile run Android 1.6. The HTC Hero, a newer phone than the MyTouch and the G1, is still stuck on 1.5, along with the even newer Motorola Cliq, which shares one parent—Motorola—with the 2.0-loaded Droid. Why is this something to worry about? Remember Google Maps Navigation, the free turn-by-turn app for Android? It only works on Android 2.0 and 1.6. An app written by Google doesn’t even work on every new Google phone. Imagine how things are with third party apps. (Spoiler: it’s a shitshow.)

Google’s been fairly diligent about updating the free, open-source heart of Android moving forward at a steady pace, and supplying handset manufacturers with the tools they need to keep their handsets running the latest software. That said, Google still deserves some of the blame here. That their software updates include new, exclusive functionality is fine on its own. And yeah, their eagerness to allow for Android to be skinned and deeply customized by handset manufacturers is fine on its own—in fact, it’s implicit in the project’s open source ethos. But mixed together, these ambitions create a gurgling software slurry of incompatibility, user experience inconsistency and general frustration. (See: Samsung Behold II) So what happened?

The problem is in the model. Android updates seed out through carriers, over the air or with special installers. This is because the updates are their responsibility: once handset manufacturers (and carriers, through handset manufacturers) have built their own version of Android, they’ve effectively taken it out of the development stream. Updating it is their responsibility, which they have to choose to uphold. Or not! Who cares? The phones are already sold. And there’s very little to motivate a carrier or handset manufacturer to update their Android phones, because the consequences tend to fall on Google: If Android fragments, the App Market doesn’t work. The public sours. Android starts to suck. This is where the Nexus One comes in.

Sold without a carrier, software updates for the Nexus One will be in Google’s hands. They will be able to keep it up to date as Android develops, without having to depend on some other company—or companies—not to drop the ball. Users won’t have to bother learning Google’s esoteric dessert-themed version codenames, and life will be better. This approach to software updates already has a case study: the iPhone. There’s a good reason Apple didn’t entrust AT&T with keeping the iPhone up to date, and that they didn’t want the company that actually manufacturers the phone—Foxconn—to have any responsibility for its software. Smartphone software is finicky and complicated, and so is the experience of using it. It needs to be tightly controlled to remain consistent, and because apps are the most important part of a smartphone platform nowadays, consistency is life or death.

Without totally changing what the Android project is, Google can’t put an absolute stop to fragmentation. What they can do is provide an example of how an Android phone should be done. With the Nexus One, Google probably isn’t getting into the business of making hardware; they’re just trying, in their passive, Googly way, to regain control of a project that’s spiraling toward chaos.

Update: Some input from someone who works in a major carrier’s device development group:

There is TONS of incentive for carriers to update their
software. Take a look at Verizon hosting the only Android 2.0 device.
Are you going to tell me that Sprint and T-Mobile wouldn’t love to
have their Android devices on 2.0 yesterday?

The truth is, there’s very little incentive for the Handset maker to
provide an update. All those phones are already sold and in the
carrier’s inventory. Any investment in updating those models will
bring them no additional cash flow. However focusing on their next
model will.

He’s partly right: carriers have a motivation to keep their software up to date, in that they are the ones who have to deal most with customers. Handset manufacturers are the one’s with the least motivation, since their sale has already been made. But in branding a handset with their name, effectively selling it as their product, and assuming responsibility for seeding updates, a carrier becomes responsible for making sure their customers have up-to-date software, and exerting pressure on handset manufacturers is they don’t hold up their end. —Thanks, David!

Entourage Edge dual-screen Android e-reader given lusty hands-on (video)

It’s one thing to see the Entourage Edge in a controlled demonstration by a company representative, something else entirely in the capable hands on CNET‘s Ina Fried. Ina got down with a prototype of the Marvell-powered, dual-display, 9.7-inch E Ink and 10-inch LCD hybrid with built-in WiFi. The video walkthrough after the break shows that Android-powered resistive touchscreen browsing the web and launching other apps from the familiar Android desktop. The E Ink display lets you read EPUB and PDF files, as you’d expect, in addition to taking notes and manipulating text with the help of an included stylus. You can also move content between the displays and record audio via a pair of mics (one to record the lecture, one to cancel the noise). Unfortunately, Fried says that the device is still buggy and “definitely has the look and feel of a first-generation product.” Sounds like the company has its work cut out in order to launch as planned in February as a textbook / notebook replacement for “typical highschool students” with $490 to burn. Let’s hope they have more luck with that than Amazon did in its early Princeton pilot. Right.

[Thanks, Henry]

Continue reading Entourage Edge dual-screen Android e-reader given lusty hands-on (video)

Entourage Edge dual-screen Android e-reader given lusty hands-on (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 16 Dec 2009 03:17:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Nexus One finally caught on video alongside its packaging (updated)

Frankly, we’re surprised it took this long, but lo and behold, here we are with the first video of the Nexus One we’ve seen. It’s just the all-too-brief and familiar boot animation, but thenexusone.com promises this is just one of many videos to come, and with any luck, a nicer video camera can be found in the interim. Also on hand is a few snapshots of the casing it came with — don’t read too much into that, however, as even the developer-only Google Ion had fancy packaging. Video after the break.

Update: Video of the animated background now available over the break as is a first pic of the onscreen keyboard

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

Continue reading Nexus One finally caught on video alongside its packaging (updated)

Nexus One finally caught on video alongside its packaging (updated) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 15 Dec 2009 21:40:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Android 2.1 moves down food chain, ROM now ported to G1 (update: hoax)

Future, meet your past. The fine lads at xda-developers forums have ported the Android 2.1 ROM — you know, the updated OS from Nexus One that everyone’s been talking about lately — all the way to the original G1. Right now it’s being dubbed version 0.9999 since it’s still lacking A2SD, CompCache, and SWAP… and if you’re feeling confused by the terminology, it might be best to not try this at home just yet. Creator Teh Dust has also removed a few things for the sake of making it more lightweight, including Car Home, Live Boot, and high resolution wallpapers / apps that don’t jive with the G1 anyway. Willing, curious, and wanting to impress your Droid-carrying friends? File’s hiding in plain sight, waiting for you.

Update: Quoth the raven, ’twas a hoax and nothing more.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

Android 2.1 moves down food chain, ROM now ported to G1 (update: hoax) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 15 Dec 2009 20:39:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Entelligence: A Google Phone could be the death of Android

Entelligence is a column by technology strategist and author Michael Gartenberg, a man whose desire for a delicious cup of coffee and a quality New York bagel is dwarfed only by his passion for tech. In these articles, he’ll explore where our industry is and where it’s going — on both micro and macro levels — with the unique wit and insight only he can provide.

Without a doubt, the big buzz since the weekend has been over the “Google Phone,” an HTC-built device called the Nexus One handed out to Google employees last week in what Google describes as a “mobile lab.” Confirmed to be running Android 2.1, the Nexus One has once again raised the idea of Google selling unlocked devices directly to consumers. (Google has been selling unlocked HTC Android phones for some time, but only to developers.)

It would be a strange turnabout if Mountain View made this move, directly going in the face of previous assurances that Google had no plans to compete directly with Android hardware manufacturers. What’s more, there are a lot of unanswered questions here.

Continue reading Entelligence: A Google Phone could be the death of Android

Entelligence: A Google Phone could be the death of Android originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 15 Dec 2009 18:04:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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