
HTC's Magic is the second Android-powered phone to hit the market.
(Credit: HTC)
The
GMSA Mobile World
Congress show in Barcelona could have been a great place for Google to
demonstrate progress establishing Android in the industry, but
instead the open-source operating system showed only a slightly larger toehold.
Google has high hopes for Android, which the company launched in an effort to
spur smartphone development, mobile use of the Web, and new search advertising.
Although Android certainly isn't vaporware, and Google's clout makes the effort
a serious challenge to other operating systems, so far Android's potential
exceeds its real-world presence.
The biggest Android news from the show was the debut of the
HTC Magic. This new Android model is
the second Android model from the Taiwanese company; the first, HTC's Dream, is
better known as the T-Mobile G1.
The Magic has a touchscreen keyboard, like the Apple iPhone and unlike the
Dream's physical keyboard.
Vodafone will offer
the Android phone as the exclusive supplier in the UK, Spain,
Germany, and France, and as a non-exclusive supplier in Italy.
The Magic also made a cameo in a Google demonstration of a high-powered,
offline-capable
version mobile Gmail.
The next tidbit came with
Huawei
Technologies' mockup of an iPhone-like Android model. Although that system
wasn't actually running any software, Edward Chen, leader of Huawei's device
business unit, said the company expected them to be on the market in the third
quarter of 2009.
After that, though, it was slim pickings, though Sony Ericsson, Motorola, and
Garmin all have committed to releasing Android devices this year. Samsung decided
against showing off
its Android phone. Meanwhile,
Microsoft showed off its forthcoming
Windows Mobile 6.5, due in the fourth quarter.
Rich Miner, leader of the Android effort, wasn't worried about the relative
lack of Android phones.
"We think we are very much on track. We only released the open-source code
late last October," Miner said in an interview. "We said we'd have the release
software out in 2008 and we did. We said we'd have at least one phone out in
2008, and we launched that in October."
Designing phones takes time, he added. "If you understand anything about the
design cycle for OEMs (original equipment manufacturers) to build handsets, it
takes a good 12 to 18 months to go from paper to completion. And there are many
handsets in development now. The second phone has been announced and we expect
to see more throughout the year," Miner said.
Android shows in smartphones with a lot of computing muscle today, but Miner
also promised that Android would move into more mainstream phones next year.
"The vision long term is to take this down market, but this is the first
version and we wanted it to be best-in-class and to come out with a bang. In
terms of going down market, we'll probably start to see lower-end smartphones
and higher-end feature phones using it in 2010," Miner said. "The key thing to
remember is that this release is 1.0 of the software. We're very happy with the
first and second phones that have come out."
CNET News staff writer Maggie Reardon contributed to this report.
Via
CNET Blogs
To post comments, you need to become a member. It's FREE.