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Today Google confirmed what we all saw coming a few weeks back, that it is developing cell phone software.



Google developing cell phone software
Search giant aims to shake up mobile phone market with new services
The Associated Press
updated 11:27 a.m. ET, Mon., Nov. 5, 2007

SAN FRANCISCO - Confirming its long-rumored foray into the mobile market, Google said Monday it is developing a free cell phone software package so the Internet search leader can more easily peddle ads and services to people who are not in front of a PC.

Google's software looms as a significant threat to other mobile operating systems made by Microsoft Corp., Research In Motion Ltd., Palm Inc. and Symbian, which is owned by Nokia Corp. and several other major phone makers.

(Msnbc.com is a Microsoft-NBC Universal joint venture.)

Google will not be making the phones, nor does it plan to stamp its prized brand on the devices. Instead, it will work with four cell phone manufacturers who have agreed to use Google's programs in their handsets. Consumers will have to buy a new phone to get the Google software because the bundle was not made for existing handsets.

The announcement ended months of speculation about the Mountain View-based company's cellular ambitions, the first phones equipped with Google's so-called "software stack" still won't be available until the second half of 2008.

Engineers have been working on the software for three years, dating back to a Silicon Valley startup called Android Inc. that Google acquired in 2005. The mobile software still bears the Android name in acknowledgment of its heritage.

"This is going to bring the Internet into cell phones in a very cool way," promised Andy Rubin, an Android co-founder who is now Google's director of mobile platforms.

Because Google's software will be free, it could undercut rivals who charge handset makers to install their operating systems. It also promises to make smart phones less expensive since manufacturers won't have to pay for software.

Google's system will also be based on computer code that can be openly distributed among programmers. That, Google hopes, will encourage developers to create new applications and other software improvements that could spawn new uses for smart phones.

"This is a shot that is going to be heard around the world, but it's just the first shot in what is going to be a very protracted battle in the next frontier of the mobile Web," said Michael Gartenberg, a Jupiter Research vice president.

So far, Motorola Inc., Samsung Electronics Co., HTC and LG Electronics Inc. have agreed to use Google's software in some of their phones. Both Motorola and Samsung already buy Microsoft's Windows Mobile in some of their phones.

The list of wireless carriers that have agreed to provide service for the Google-powered phone in the United States include Sprint Nextel Corp. and Deutsche Telekom's T-Mobile in the United States. China Mobile, Telefonica in Spain and Telecom Italia are among the carriers that have signed on to provide service outside the United States.

They are among a Google-led group of 34 companies that have formed the Open Handset Alliance. Other key players include major chip makers like Intel Corp., Qualcomm Inc., Texas Instruments Inc., Broadcom Corp. and Nvidia Corp.

"This partnership will help unleash the potential of mobile technology for billions of users around the world," said Eric Schmidt, Google Inc.'s chief executive.

Some key details, like pricing and how many phones will be shipped next year, have yet to be worked out.

There is so much to think about with this move. I have not given myself time to make sense of it all.

Does anyone have any thoughts about the motives for and implications of this effort?

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Comments (2)

Jardinero1 on November 5, 2007 11:30 PM:

The strategy is more simple than you think. Sprint/Nextel is investing billions in a national WiMax network. It will distribute phones that feature the Google software on a combination WiFi, WiMax, Cellular network. Advertisements will pay the freight for the subscriber. Sprint/Nextel will go from being a dominant telecom to the only telecom. I shit you not.

Jardinero1 on November 6, 2007 10:47 AM:

Of course, once Sprint/Nextel dominates there is nothing to stop them from throwing Google under a bus and going back to a proprietary, fee for service model.

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