Android 2.2 SDK goes live, developers likely unable to crash Google’s download server

Giving devs access to freshly-announced versions of mobile operating systems on the very same day that they’re announced is pretty much the way things work nowadays — the first version of Windows Phone 7 understandably excepted — so we’re pleased to see that Google’s kit for Android 2.2 Froyo is now up and running. You start out by downloading a modest 18-odd megabyte package that just contains tools with no target platforms, then you open a separate app to pull and install only the platforms you want (you can go all the way back to version 1.5, if you’re so inclined). So kick off that download now while you grab lunch — we hear the lobster bisque they’re serving in the cafeteria today is pretty good.

[Thanks, Justin B.]

Android 2.2 SDK goes live, developers likely unable to crash Google’s download server originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 20 May 2010 13:12:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Google adding over-the-air app installation and iTunes streaming to Android

Sure sure, Froyo is great and all, but Google just blew our minds with two previews of upcoming Android features at I/O: OTA application installation and remote music streaming. OTA installation is just as simple as you’d expect — after browsing to an app on your desktop, you can push it to your phone and install it with just a single click, all done over the air. Interestingly, Google also showed music being purchased and transferred from Android Marketplace in the same way, which could indicate a deeper push towards music integration, or just be a nice demo. Either way, it’s pretty slick stuff — the fewer wires we have to carry, the better.

The remote music streaming is a little crazier: Google bought a company called Simplify Media, which makes a bit of desktop software that can stream all your music directly from iTunes to your phone. The demo was quite slick — you just open the app and push “all,” and all your music is instantly available. Whether or not this’ll work over 3G or be limited to the local network is still up in the air, but we’re dying to try it out.

Google adding over-the-air app installation and iTunes streaming to Android originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 20 May 2010 12:17:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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What’s New in Android 2.2 [Android]

Android 2.2 is here. We’ve been using it with Flash 10.1 and it is nicer than 2.1 in some small, but key ways. Like built-in tethering and Wi-Fi hotspot powers. Oh, and Flash.
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First Look: Flash Arrives on New Android OS

android_flash

Flash has been a contentious point for the ongoing battle between Apple and Adobe.

The latest volley: Adobe is releasing Flash Player 10.1 for mobile phones and desktops today. And it is piggy-backing on Google’s fast growing Android operating system to hit back at Apple.

Google’s latest mobile operating system, Android 2.2, aka FroYo, will support Adobe’s Flash Player 10.1, a new version that claims to be optimized for mobile viewing.

That will make Android the first mobile operating system to support the full Flash player, instead of the stripped-down Flash Lite player that is currently found on most smartphones with Flash support.

Among PC users, Flash is popular: It is on more than 98 percent of all browsers, and the platform claims more than 3 million developers worldwide. Nearly 70 percent of web-based games are built using Flash, says Adobe.

But when Apple launched the iPhone in 2007, it stunned users by shunning Flash, instead creating its own walled garden of applications including games for its customers to play with. That’s led many to announce, somewhat prematurely, the death of Flash.

We tested different websites with the Flash 10.1 Player on a Nexus One running Android 2.2, and here’s our first take: With Flash on your phone, no website is really out of bounds. Flash does not appear to be a battery hog, nor does it chew away at your phone’s resources.

But it’s not a flawless experience either. Flash content — especially video — can take up to a minute to load, which is more frustrating on a phone than it is on a desktop. And it sucks bandwidth. Our corporate Wi-Fi connection just didn’t seem good enough, and most Flash-heavy sites took a while to load.

Still it is a step forward and with fine-tuning, the beta version of the Flash Player should get better. Read on to see how Flash did on Android 2.2 OS.

Flash is fun — when it works.

Accessing many restaurant websites, movie trailers or most fashion sites on the iPhone is impossible. It’s isn’t a big inconvenience, but the small, blue, Lego-like icon that appears in place of Flash content has come to signify the part of the online world that’s cut off to an iPhone user.

With Flash Player 10.1 on Android 2.2, one of the first things I did was check out Swadley’s, a barbecue restaurant in Oaklahoma City that a friend mentioned a few days ago. Swadley’s website, built using Flash, has the outline of a cowboy on a horse galloping through the front page. It’s cheesy on a desktop, but on an iPhone it’s just a black hole.

My new Nexus One browser had no such problems. The Swadley’s site loads exactly as it does on the desktop, and was fast enough to signal the promise of the technology.

From there, I hopped on to the Sony Pictures web site to check out the trailer for Karate Kid, a re-make starring Will Smith’s son Jaden Smith. I could watch the trailers, pinch-to-enlarge it and check out some of the trivia on the site. But Flash stumbled here, forcing me to reload the site about three times when the trailer didn’t pop up on the screen the way it was supposed to.

The Warner Bros. site optimized for Flash Player 10.1 did better, with movie trailers playing flawlessly on the phone.

That’s not to say everything is perfect with Flash Player 10.1. Fashion websites have been big supporters of Flash, using it to showcase videos of their latest collections and runway presentations. Chanel’s site has a video that shows its Cruise 2010 collection. Five seconds into the video, it failed to play and the spinning circle took over the site, forcing me to close it down.

For Hulu enthusiasts, there’s bad news. Flash Player 10.1 doesn’t mean you can revisit Lost episodes on the phone. Hulu doesn’t own the distribution rights for its content on mobile devices and so won’t stream to any mobile device, says Adobe.

Flash-based games sites, including Club Penguin, were accessible to the FroYo phone, in stark contrast to the iPhone (and previous versions of Android). But that’s where the fun ended. Loading the content is a frustratingly long process, and the Club Penguin site seemed to challenge the processing power of the phone, so my penguin on the phone couldn’t do much.

Flash Player 10.1 supports gestures, such as dragging your finger to scroll the screen or double-tapping on the video, and that works pretty smoothly.

Optimized battery life

Apple’s biggest beef with Adobe Flash is that the technology hogs battery life and is a drain on system resources.

Adobe says it has made tweaks that will shut down the Flash Player 10.1 when the system runs out of memory.

As I surfed a number of Flash-heavy websites, played movie trailers and little video clips on and off for about two hours. the battery level on my phone was down to about 61 percent from a fully charged battery.

Adobe says Flash Player 10.1 along with FroYo will be available starting June, though handset makers and carriers might take longer to push it to consumers. Ultimately, Flash will be available on the BlackBerry, Windows Mobile, Symbian and webOS platforms — basically everything except the iPhone, says Adobe — though the company didn’t give specific availability for other platforms.

But three years after Apple declared a war against mobile Flash, you have to wonder if Adobe’s efforts are too late. The online video  landscape has changed significantly. Many major websites are switching to to HTML5, and video players such as Brightcove are serving up HTML5 videos for devices not compliant with Flash. Separately, Apple has worked with companies such as YouTube to produce iPhone versions of their sites. And even galloping-cowboy animations can be rendered using HTML5, eventually.

As a user, whether your phone supports Flash or not is increasingly becoming irrelevant. Getting Flash Player 10.1 mobile out is just the first step for Adobe. It will be greater challenge for the firm to show why mobile-phone users should really care about it.

See Also:

Photo: Flash Player 10.1 on a Nexus One phone
Keith Axline/Wired.com


Android 2.2 ‘Froyo’ beta hands-on: Flash 10.1, WiFi hotspots, and some killer benchmark scores

Much to our surprise at the time, when Adobe sent us a Flash 10.1-enabled Nexus One for testing, the phone came preloaded with a preview build of Android 2.2 — a.k.a. “Froyo” — the apparent turning point for curbing Android fragmentation due for a very public unveiling today at Google I/O. We’ve had a day or two to dig into it, and while we’re surely missing some improvements here or there (Google was unable to provide us a changelog as of this writing), we’ve spent pretty much all our waking moments combing through every virtual nook and cranny. So what can Eclair alumni expect from the revised platform? Read on for more!

Continue reading Android 2.2 ‘Froyo’ beta hands-on: Flash 10.1, WiFi hotspots, and some killer benchmark scores

Android 2.2 ‘Froyo’ beta hands-on: Flash 10.1, WiFi hotspots, and some killer benchmark scores originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 20 May 2010 12:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Google claims Froyo has the world’s fastest mobile browser

You heard it here first, folks. Google has just come out with the strident claim that the web browser in Android 2.2, aka Froyo, is the world’s fastest for mobile devices. Having implemented the V8 JavaScript Engine that’s already made an appearance in its desktop Chrome browser, Google’s reporting JavaScript performance that’s somewhere in the vicinity of two to three times better than what you can get from previous Android versions. We’ll give this geek cabal some style points for the double equals sign up top, but will certainly be putting its bold assertion to the test in the very near future.

Google claims Froyo has the world’s fastest mobile browser originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 20 May 2010 11:56:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Android 2.2 Froyo officially announced

No huge surprises here, but Google just announced Android 2.2 “Froyo” at I/O, and the big addition is a just-in-time compiler, which brings a 2-5x speed boost to the system. There are also 20 new enterprise features, including better Exchange integration and device administration APIs, as well as a new device backup app that’ll let you transfer personal data to a new device. Android 2.2 also features a new cloud-to-device messaging API that Google called “much more than a push notification service designed to make up for a lack of basic features like multitasking,” and of course, WiFi tethering — which was used to get a WiFi iPad online during the demo to great cheers. Google also demoed a new JavaScript engine in the Android browser, which is billed as “the world’s fastest web browser,” and a Chrome browser plugin that allows you to send directions from Maps on your desktop directly to your phone.

It’s all going on live right now, so make sure to go hit our I/O liveblog!

Android 2.2 Froyo officially announced originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 20 May 2010 11:48:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Android 2.2 Is 2x to 5x Faster For Apps (Plus So Many More Features) [Android]

And to illustrate this point, below is a side-by-side of the same game on the same device, with the one running 2.2 running quite a lot faster than the one with 2.1. Live Updating More »

Live from the Google I/O 2010 day 2 keynote!

Yesterday’s Google I/O keynote brought about a number of big newsbits — a Chrome web app store, the open WebM video format, and so forth — but even more tantalizing were Vic Gundotra’s not-so-subtle hints at some major announcements coming at today’s keynote. Will we finally get some details on Android’s latest updates on the food roadmap?

Continue reading Live from the Google I/O 2010 day 2 keynote!

Live from the Google I/O 2010 day 2 keynote! originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 20 May 2010 11:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Android 2.2 will invite you to visit ‘Flash-enabled’ sites, rub Apple’s nose in it

The battle for minds is well and truly on now, and if there was any doubt that Google and Adobe are cozying up together to take on Apple, let it now be extinguished. TechCrunch is reporting that the latest version of Android — you know, the one with the 450 percent performance improvement and buttery smooth Flash playback — will, upon updating, guide you to visit a selection of Flash-enabled websites. Countering Apple’s list of iPad-ready (aka Flash-free) websites, this is clearly intended as a showcase of the Adobe software’s capabilities. Ironically, a sizable number of the sites on the list are “mobile optimized,” meaning you won’t be hitting their full desktop versions (which doesn’t quite mesh with the idea of “the full web experience”), but it’s still likely to cause some consternation over in Cupertino. All we’re wondering now is how much Adobe had to pony up to ensnare such a prominent promo position, but things like that don’t stay secret for long.

Android 2.2 will invite you to visit ‘Flash-enabled’ sites, rub Apple’s nose in it originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 18 May 2010 03:07:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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