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2Android Everywhere
3Google Maps Navigation
More choice is great, right? But what happens when Google releases an application for a later Android version that won’t work for an older iteration? Complaining consumers. We first saw this with Google Maps Navigation, the turn-by-turn GPS app. The GPS app was originally created for Android 2.0+ devices such as the Motorola Droid before Google got around to adapting it for Android 1.6 devices, such as the HTC Droid Eris.
4Google Gesture Search
Google launched Google Gesture Search March 3 for Android 2.0+ devices before making it available to Android 1.6 devices a few weeks later.
5Google
Here’s the big, big upgrade that thousands of Droid users were looking for. Verizon and Motorola began pushing out Android 2.1 to the Android 2.0-based Motorola Droid March 30. Droid users, jealous of the pinch-to-zoom voice-to-text and other nifty features they saw with the Android 2.1-based Google Nexus One, were clamoring for the upgrade since Motorola promised it. After several delays, the telco and phone maker came through.
6Google Earth for Android 2.1
7Consequences
Now you know all the games Google, phone makers like Motorola and HTC, and carriers such as Verizon must play to get Android users the apps they want. IMS Research analyst Chris Schreck said differentiating between strains of an OS, modifying code for each strain, and ensuring that a user obtains the appropriate version of a program, aren’t practical for many mobile developers.
8Developers Get Pinched
9Unhealthy Competition
10Handset Makers, Carriers Struggle to Keep Up
Handset makers and mobile network carriers also suffer because cost of maintaining an investment in an OS goes up with each variation of the platform one needs to support, Schreck said. Motorola and Verizon, for example, had to work feverishly to upgrade the Droid to Android 2.1 and it still missed several deadlines.
11A Fix With the Froyo Android Build
Google is rumored to be working on addressing the issue by decoupling applications from the OS and making them available in the Android Market, starting with the Froyo (frozen yogurt) build. Schreck concluded that while Android will see considerable market share gains, in the future Google must manage fragmentation. “Otherwise, other operating systems like Symbian or the LiMo Platform, both of which take a harder line on platform fragmentation in the software license, will stand to gain as open source alternatives.”