T-Mobile G1, the first phone powered by Google's Android software (Credit: T-Mobile)
Attention coders:
Google has released version
1.0 of the Android software developer kit.
The kit lets programmers create applications that will run on Android phones,
even before T-Mobile starts selling the first Android-powered G1 on October 22. The biggest difference from the
previous
Android SDK 0.9: Software
built with version 1.0 will actually, not just probably, work on those
real-world phones, according to the
SDK release notes.
Google hopes its Android operating system project will help spur the mobile phone industry into a
more enthusiastic embrace of Internet technology. Google of course profits from
ads next to search results, and Google Maps opens up other advertising
possibilities that are more closely tied to a phone user's physical location.
A major part of the Android effort is Google's attempt to woo outside
programmers into writing their own applications for Android phones, because
Google hopes to bring the easier innovation of the PC market to the relatively
closed mobile phone industry. The SDK is a key part of that effort, as is a
forthcoming application download site called the Android Market. That market won't necessarily let people sell
Android applications at first, though.
Also in the SDK release notes, Google called out some
specific
changes, such as some new abilities to make use of Android phone sensors,
handle audio files, and use Wi-Fi networks. Serious programmers can look at
Google's
catalog of API (application programming interface) differences.
Google couldn't help adding a little nerd humor to the release notes:
"We regret to inform developers that Android 1.0 will not include support for
dot-matrix printers."
Via
CNET News
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