Android is an open source operating program created by Google for main use on smartphones, and is currently in use on many cellphones such as the Motorola Droid, the HTC Droid Eris, the HTC Hero, the HTC Desire, the MyTouch 3G Slide, and the Dell Streak.
Lately there is been a developer release of the Android operating system for use on the x86 archictecture, which will ultimately permit Android to be ported to tablets, netbooks as well as onto laptops and desktops, as well as onto many other devices, like set-top boxes, video game systems, home control systems as well as other things not even believed of however.
Android is written in Java on a modified version of the Linux kernel. Due to its open architecture, it is easy for developers to construct applications to run on the Android operating system. Unlike the Apple closed architecture, with its draconian gatekeepers, anyone capable of coding can write an application to run on Android. And if Google's rules are followed, that application will probably be made available to all Android users.
What that indicates to you is that if you want your cellphone to do some thing it doesn't currently do, and there is not an Android application that does it, you have the ability to contract with a developer to have an application built that will allow your cellphone to do exactly what you would like, although you will find also developer groups who, if the concept is a great one, might take your project on in exchange for the ability to put their name on it and offer servicing and customization of that application, which is the way open supply works. The sky is the limit!
As of this writing you will find roughly two Android phones activated per second. Simply because Android is offered on a lot of excellent phones, with numerous new ones to be launched soon, it won't be lengthy before Android phones hold a higher market share than any other operating program on any other phone, which includes the iPhone, especially since the Android 2.2 Froyo release supports Adobe Flash, a sticking point using the iPhone and other cellphones. Android two.two Froyo is right now being rolled out towards the Nexus One, and will soon be accessible for many other Android phones.
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