This thought was first given voice by Myriam Joire on last night's Mobile Podcast, and the simple, lethal accuracy of it has haunted me ever since. All the hubbub and unrest about whether Google is trying tolock Android down or not has failed to address whether Google should be trying to control the OS, and if so, what the (valid) reasons for that may be. Herein, I present only one, but it's arguably big enough to make all the dissidence about open source idealism and promises unkept fade into insignificance.
Showing posts with label contamination. Show all posts
Showing posts with label contamination. Show all posts
Monday, April 11, 2011
Android's problem isn't fragmentation, it's contamination
This thought was first given voice by Myriam Joire on last night's Mobile Podcast, and the simple, lethal accuracy of it has haunted me ever since. All the hubbub and unrest about whether Google is trying tolock Android down or not has failed to address whether Google should be trying to control the OS, and if so, what the (valid) reasons for that may be. Herein, I present only one, but it's arguably big enough to make all the dissidence about open source idealism and promises unkept fade into insignificance.
Labels:
Android,
andy rubin,
AndyRubin,
contamination,
editorial,
fragmentation,
future,
google,
harmonization,
mobile os,
MobileOs,
operating system,
OperatingSystem,
OS,
smartphones,
standardization
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