Tarun Reflex

Friday, October 17, 2008

Google Loaded Android With A Remote Kill Switch

Filed under: Business — tarunreflex @ 4:15 pm
Tags: , , , , ,

This isn’t going to make people happy. Remember the furor when people discovered that Apple could remotely kill applications running on iPhones? Well, Google has decided to implement the same type of action. It can remove programs it deems “bad” from your HTC G1.

Now that reviews of the G1 are hitting the Web, we’re quickly going to know everything there is to know about the Android platform. ComputerWorld is reporting one interesting finding concerning a kill switch built into Android.

It says:

In the Android Market terms of service, Google expressly says that it might remotely remove an application from user phones. “Google may discover a product that violates the developer distribution agreement … in such an instance, Google retains the right to remotely remove those applications from your device at its sole discretion,” the terms, linked to from the phone, read.

Unlike Apple, Google isn’t going to be policing the Android Market with an iron fist. It claims the market will be open, that it won’t reject applications, and that anyone can submit apps for Android. That all sounds great. But what happens when someone posts a malicious application designed to compromise the security of an Android phone? Since Google isn’t vetting the apps, that can be bad news for the end users.

Similar to Apple CEO Steve Jobs’ philosophy on the matter, if and when a program is discovered that breaks the rules, Google wants to be able to pull the plug on that program. Most of the time, this will likely be to the benefit of the end user, who otherwise may wind up with a bricked Android. That’s not going to stop people from wondering about Google’s real intents or purposes behind the clause in the Android Market’s terms of service.

Remember your motto, Google: Don’t Be Evil.

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Tuesday, October 14, 2008

T-Mobile Preorders 1.5 Million G1 Android Phone

T-Mobile has already taken 1.5 million preorders of Google’s G1 Android phone, according to reports.

The staggering number of presales comes just 10 days before the T-Mobile-powered Android’s official launch date Oct. 22. Neither T-Mobile, Google or handset manufacturer HTC has confirmed the reports that first appeared on Motley Fool. According to the Web site, Apple originally thought it would sell 10 million second-generation iPhones Apple this year. The G1 preorders are three times the original amount of phones T-Mobile ordered from Taiwan-based HTC, which rapidly sold out.

Current T-Mobile subscribers have first dibs on preorders.

“Because of overwhelming demand, we’re setting aside even more T-Mobile G1 phones as a special thanks to you, our loyal T-Mobile customers,” reads a statement on T-Mobile’s Web site. “Supplies are limited, so this is your chance to order yours today before it hits the streets and guarantee you don’t go without.”

Pricing for the G1 starts at $179.99 for T-Mobile customers, plus taxes and fees; pricing is subject to upgrade eligibility criteria—a two-year agreement is required. Orders taken prior to Oct. 21 will be delivered around Nov. 10, the company said.

T-Mobile will provide 3G services in 16 mass markets, the company said on its Web site, eventually expanding to 22 markets by Oct. 22. By mid-November, that number is expected to increase to 27 markets.

Preinstalled Google features on the G1 include Google Search, Google Maps, Gmail, Google Calendar, Google Talk and YouTube.

An application storefront—the Android Market—features apps in addition to mashups of existing and new services from developers.

Some of the bells and whistles on the G1 include a touch screen, Web browsing capabilities, 3-megapixel camera, customizable home screen, QWERTY keyboard, IM/text/e-mail, music player, video playback, and 3G network and Wi-Fi access.

 

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  • All About Google  (All posts tagged with Google in my Blogs)
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      Wednesday, September 24, 2008

      The Google Android Phone’s Big Premiere

      Filed under: Business — tarunreflex @ 12:56 pm
      Tags: , , , , , , , , , ,
      In the most anticipated mobile-phone launch since the release of Apple’s iPhone, the T-Mobile G1 was unveiled Sept. 23.

      Like the iPhone, unveiled in June 2007, the G1 is the brainchild of one of tech’s most innovative companies; it’s the first phone boasting the Android software created by a Google -led consortium. Like Apple’s music-playing handset, the G1 features a full Web browser and connects to the Internet with Wi-Fi technology. G1 similarly boasts a large touchscreen and lets users download games and tools from an online bazaar akin to the Apple App Store.

      That’s about where the similarities end. The G1 is to follow a different path from the Apple iPhone in some crucial ways, notably volume growth. G1 is expected to do well, though it may not replicate the iPhone’s early successes.
      Fewer T-Mobile Subscribers

      Analysts predict that manufacturer HTC will sell 200,000 to 400,000 units this year, once the device becomes available on Oct. 22 in select markets. The device will sell for $179 with a two-year contract. At the high end of that estimate, the first Android device would gain almost 4% of the U.S. smartphone market in the fourth quarter, expected by wireless researcherStrategy Analytics to total 10.5 million. Tina Teng, an analyst at research firm iSuppli, believes Android-based devices will sell 2 million to 3 million units globally in 2009.

      Still, the original iPhone sold 1 million units in its first 1½ months on the market—and that was during what is usually a slow sales season, compared with end-of-year holidays. Apple expects to sell 10 million units of the next-generation device, the iPhone 3G, this year.

      Sales expectations are lower for Android partly because G1 will be carried by T-Mobile USA, which has 30 million subscribers, compared with Apple’s iPhone partner, AT&T, which has more than 70 million.

      Another strike against Android is that T-Mobile’s high-speed wireless network isn’t as extensive as AT&T’s. “Consumers still choose the carrier first,” says Ross Rubin, an analyst at consumer electronics research firmNPD Group . “For early adopters, they’d need to contend with T-Mobile’s embryonic 3G network for at least a few months,” Rubin says. What’s more, G1 buyers will likely have to buy an additional calling plan to use G1’s built-in Wi-Fi more extensively; iPhone users can freely use their device’s Wi-Fi capability. T-Mobile will offer a limited data plan for $25 a month and unlimited Web access and messaging for $35 a month.

      Some analysts who have seen versions of G1 also say it’s not quite as stylish as the comparable Apple device. “It does not feel as luxurious as the iPhone,” says Moe Tanabian, senior principal at IBB Consulting who has seen a late prototype of the device. The device is a cross between the iPhone and a Sidekick, an earlier T-Mobile phone that also boasts Web access and was a favorite of hip cell-phone users. Andy Rubin, who heads Google’s Android effort, helped develop the Sidekick.


      Wide-Open App Marketplace

      Google and other Android supporters surely will try to prove the pessimists wrong. Google, for one, is expected to launch an extensive marketing campaign for the device. “Google is the defining Web 2.0 company for online search,” Ambrosio says. T-Mobile is also throwing its marketing muscle behind the G1—though its budget is typically nowhere near as big as that of larger rivals. “It will be the biggest marketing campaign we ever launched for a mobile device,” Cole Brodman, T-Mobile’s chief information and innovation officer, said at the unveiling, attended by Google founders Sergey Brin and Larry Page.

      G1 sales will also benefit from the flexibility of the Android Marketplace online app store. Unlike Apple’s iTunes App Store , Google’s marketplace won’t vet developers. Google will let anyone post applications to its store, where features will be rated in aYouTube -like manner. The openness of the Android software also can make it easier for developers to create associated tools more quickly.

      The Android-based handset also boasts a slide-out full Qwerty keyboard, which the iPhone lacks. The device, which will feature a capable music player, that allows for easy music downloads from Amazon, is also expected to come in three colors: black, white, and brown. And as expected it offers plenty of tight integration with a wide range of Google services, including search, mapping, and address book tools. “If T-Mobile launches a bugs-free, easy-to-use phone, then its brand equity will increase,” says Tanabian, who has consulted for T-Mobile.

      The Android Army Is Coming

      Apple’s iPhone isn’t expected to be the main competitor for G1. The Android-based phone may erode sales of the Sidekick, phones that run Microsoft’s  Windows Mobile software, and smartphones made by Motorola  and Research In Motion , maker of the BlackBerry. RIM “might lose some share by virtue of being the market leader” in the U.S., Rubin says. T-Mobile’s parent, Deutsche Telekom, will introduce the phone in the U.K. on Oct. 22 and elsewhere in Europe in the first quarter of 2009.

      G1 stands to become a more formidable competitor as it’s picked up by other manufacturers as well. Motorola,LG and Samsung are expected to launch Android models worldwide in 2009. And their Android-based phones may look vastly different from each other and the G1. Europeans may get a slider with a 12-key keyboard that they favor. Japan may get a phone with built-in mobile TV. There could be special phones for doctors or for lawyers.

      Big cell-phone carriers also will help determine the success of coming Android phones. “Android has the potential to be much bigger than Apple because they can have many more manufacturers making its products,” says Chris Ambrosio, an analyst with consultancy Strategy Analytics.

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      Friday, September 5, 2008

      A decade on | Google’s Internet Economy | Analysis

      It’s the success story to beat all internet success stories.

      Ten years ago, on 7 September 1998, two young graduate students at Stanford University incorporated a company with the (then) odd-sounding name “Google”.

      Today, Larry Page and Sergey Brin are billionaires. Their company is hugely profitable; between April and June this year alone, it reported a turnover of $5.7bn (£3.2bn) and generated a net profit of $1.25bn (the first quarter was even more profitable).

      Not bad for a company that makes its money being a broker for and publisher of online advertising.

      The secret of Google’s success, of course, is the algorithm driving its internet search engine. In fact, it is so good that it has entered our dictionaries.

      People don’t search the internet any more, they google it.

      The secret sauce

      Some critics accuse Google of being a one-trick pony and warn that competitors, newly emerging and potentially better search engines, are a mere mouse click away. 

      But Google’s secret sauce has more ingredients than its clever way of organising and ranking search results.

      Equally important is the technology underlying the vast data centres that give Google the scale, speed and efficiency to serve its rapidly growing number of users.

      And finally there are Google’s two money spinners: AdWords – which puts relevant advertisements next to Google’s own search results – and AdSense, the revenue-sharing deals that put Google’s context-driven adverts on third-party websites.

      The clever thing here is Google’s restraint. It auctions advertising space not to the highest bidder but the most relevant advertiser, making Google users happy and generating more lucrative click-throughs to the websites of the advertisers.

      Google’s real ambition

      Google may be a money spinner, but the company says it has much more high-minded aims than making a fast internet buck.

      “Google’s mission is to organize the world’s information and make it universally accessible and useful,” claims its corporate vision statement.

      Note the word universal. Whether high-minded or not, it is this “Google everywhere” ambition that makes it such a successful company.

      Over the years, Google has been releasing a steady stream of innovative tools and services – some of them developed in-house, many others bought in from start-ups: Gmail, Google Docs for word processing and spreadsheets, Picasa for picture editing, Google Earth and Maps for location-based search and display of information, Blogger, YouTube’s video service … the list is seemingly endless.

      Not that long ago this looked like random growth. But as these services get a more coherent look and feel, the pieces of Google’s puzzle are falling into place.

      Every search we do, every tool we use helps Google to gather more information and organise the artefacts of our knowledge society.

      The price to pay

      Providing an entry point to Google’s search engine at every level keeps feeding our Google habit, and creates a virtuous circle: the more information Google has, the better its search results, the happier its users, the higher the click-throughs on adverts, the bigger the profits, the more money for new “free” services that entice users to surrender yet more information.

      It may leave us happy and Google profitable, but is it a corporate disaster waiting to happen?

      Messrs Page and Brin may famously – or notoriously – promise that Google “can make money without doing evil”.

      But with Google hoarding all this personalised and traceable information in its vast data centres, issues of data safety, privacy, and corporate Big Brothership are looming large.

      The chrome Android

      Google is expanding because the internet is expanding. The definition of where the internet ends is getting hazy, with devices like fridges, digital picture frames and mobile phones becoming part of the internet-enabled world.

      The company’s next steps are already mapped. This week it launched its very own internet browser, called Chrome.

      Today’s browsers were built to show web pages, says Google, not to be platforms for complex applications.  Chrome promises to bring stability to our online experience – and the more computing happens on the internet, the more information Google can gather.

      Coming shortly is an even more important piece of software called Android, Google’s (Linux-based) operating system for internet-enabled telephones.

      Google makes the same business case as for  Chrome: today’s smart phones were not designed for the mobile internet, so Google steps into the breach.

      Partner or rival?

      The company started ten years ago by two students has the size to do it all.

      At the end of 2007 it had 16,800 employees, and is reportedly hiring about 100 new people each week. 

      But with Google spreading its wings and complementing more and more parts of our lives, a rapidly growing number of companies in ever more industries have to ponder whether this “search engine” is a partner, a competitor or a destroyer of business models.

      Google’s company motto could quite as well be: “Anything you can do I can do better – and for free.”

      It leaves even Google’s largest rivals constantly stressed out – whether it is Microsoft (who saw the beta launch of its new browser Internet Explorer 8 overshadowed by Chrome), or ailing web portal Yahoo, which was forced to agree a revenue-sharing deal by outsourcing some of its advertising to Google.

      Even the people who happily pay Google top advertising dollar are getting worried. They complain that Google’s dominance could result in a lack of choice, not least since the company bought its way into the world of traditional display advertising on the web, through the acquisition of Doubleclick.

      Triumvirate

      This is especially true during the current economic downturn. Google expects that its revenue is going to hold up, because its advertising service is highly targeted and its success measurable. It’s the old media with their mass medium approach that have to worry.

      And to reassure investors, Google executives are pledging that they won’t fall into the Yahoo trap of trying to turn Google into a media company.

      Google chief executive Eric Schmidt told Conde Nast Portfolio that “one of the general rules we’ve had is ‘don’t own the content; partner with your content company'”.

      But even here the lines are blurring. Is there a lot of difference between “old media” publishing the pictures and videos supplied by news agencies, freelance photographers and their own audiences, and Google News or YouTube?

      For now, the Google juggernaut rolls on.

      The two founders keep driving the company’s technical excellence, and Mr Schmidt – a veteran of the technology industry – ensures that the money keeps coming.

      This triumvirate has made an informal deal to stick together for at least 20 years, says Mr Schmidt.Plenty of time for Google to secure its position as the lynchpin of our internet economy.

      Google Lively
      https://tarunreflex.wordpress.com/2008/07/10/exploring-lively-googles-virtual-world/

      Google Chrome
      https://tarunreflex.wordpress.com/2008/09/03/downlaod-google-chrome-google-incs-new-browser-review-download/

      Interent Knows what you Will do next?
      https://tarunreflex.wordpress.com/2008/07/08/the-internet-knows-what-youll-do-next/

      Strangest Sites in Google Earth
      https://tarunreflex.wordpress.com/2008/01/02/the-strangest-sights-in-google-earth

      More about Google:

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