Android announced

So Android exists. As most guessed, it’s a Linux kernel with stuff running on top. Sounds very good in theory, and it’s great for developers. One of the key selling points, if I may be liberal in the usage, is that it’s ‘open’ with no restrictions on developers. So how does it break down with what’s available now?

Android vs. S60
It’s fresh, not a horrific mutation of an otherwise excellent OS—EPOC. I imagine it will be slicker, faster, with no ‘signing’ hoops to jump through. No licensing costs.

Android vs. UIQ
See above.

Android vs. Windows Mobile
It’s fresh, not the ugly child of a desktop OS. I’m certain it will be slicker, faster. However, WinMo does have a bucketload of apps for it and as I understand it, WinMo is pretty easy to develop for. No licensing costs.

Android vs. mobile Linux
Which mobile Linux? Where? Motorola doesn’t count.

Android vs. OS X
It’s fresh, though OS X on the iPhone looks awful slick. I don’t know whether Android will outdo, or equal that interface. It’s a pretty high standard to live up to. Everyone knows where Apple stands and previously stood on the issue of third-party apps. There’s a fundamental difference in philosophy here.

I’m underwhelmed now that the cat is finally out of the bag. As far as a user experience goes, I think I would have been happier with a Google-branded phone. That’s not to say I wish they had gone the Apple route, just that now we have to wait and see what the manufacturers and carriers come up with. I’ll go out on a limb and say that this will probably be the best mobile OS to develop for, and ultimately use, but what of the hardware?

There are some very interesting names in the Open Handset Alliance, including LG, Motorola, Samsung, HTC, Nvidia, Broadcoam among others. I just hope it all comes together in great phones that we will all want to use, not near-misses. I can’t remember how many times I’ve seen a new phone announced and closed the browser window when I see that it eschews either 3G or WiFi or both. Give me a speedy phone with lots of connectivity and reasonable text input, and you can have my $400.

Hero Honda 'Hunk' launched

Further proof that everybody in the Hero Honda marketing department is either in the closet, or flamboyantly out of it. HH has created a new segment to drop this turd into—’Macho’, with the rest floating in the ‘Biker’, ‘Style’ and ‘Commuter’ pools. I won’t bother indicating which is which, because it matters about as much as what breed dog poo tastes better. Specs? Irrelevant.

Props to rearset for his excellent coverage. He is a true man of steel for putting up with this tripe and still managing restrained reportage.

Native Google Maps Mobile for S60

Found this in Howardforums—Google Maps Mobile is now native for S60. I downloaded it on my E61 and it works well. Quicker, smoother, though strangely, it’s missing the bookmark function. Get it from here.

Update: On the same day, I also checked out the mobile GMail app, and that has been updated to v1.5 as well. There are some improvements, though nothing exciting.

Love redux

Scene: Bed, ready to drop off to sleep.

Me: I bought lots of life insurance for you. Have you bought any for me?
ET: (nods)
Me: Cool! How come you never told me?
ET: I wanted it to be a surprise. (giggles)

Sometimes I get depressed about the things I don’t have. But in other ways, I have exactly what I’ve always wanted.

New mobile browser: Teashark

It’s all over the place by now. I’m trying it out, and it’s rather good for an Alpha release. Nice features include syncing with del.icio.us and auto feed discovery. It’s supposed to be based on WebKit, so now we have two nice rendering engines for mobile (the other being Opera Mini). See teashark.com or download direct to your cellphone from wap.teashark.com.

Strange bug heads-up: I can’t type the forward-slash (/) on my E61. Sort of limiting.