Google and 33 other companies have announced an ambitious industry alliance that will maintain a completely open-source mobile phone stack. The OHA (Open Handset Alliance) says phones based on its Linux-based “Android” stack will reach the market in as soon as eight months.
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The Android stack is based on an “open Linux kernel,” the OHA said. It also includes a full set of mobile phone application software, in order to “significantly lower the cost of developing and distributing mobile devices and services.”
/zimages/1/28571.gifClick here to read more about Google’s moves to sign up partners in its mobile phone push.
The stack appears to have been created by Android, a mobile phone software house that Google acquired just over two years ago. The Android stack’s name is apparently a reflection of co-founder Andy Rubin’s fondness for robots.
Rubin previously co-founded Danger, a software house that continues to provide software for the Sidekick “hiptop” marketed by T-Mobile.
/zimages/1/28571.gifRead the full story on LinuxDevices.com: Google Rallies Allies in Open Linux Phone Initiative
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