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Thanksgiving Interview - Android maker talks mashups and mobiles

November 22nd, 2007 by Head Robot

Andy Rubin, director of mobile platforms at Google, talked to CNET News.com about Android:

Thanksgiving

Q: What does Android look like?

A: Google has stepped up on behalf of the alliance to do various components of the support from a developer community perspective. We have a user interface team continuing development on the UI, and there will actually be a replacement UI.

We’ve been building it as a mobile mashup platform. That is a new concept for [mobile] phones. So the developer can now stand on the system platform and take advantage of other developers’ work for the first time. So, that just creates more flexibility for the developers, less work, faster turnaround, rapid prototyping, and all that stuff, and we’re really, really excited about that concept.

Q: Is there a prototype dubbed Dream? Who has it, and when are we going to see it?

A: I actually don’t know where that name come from. That’s been an internal code-name that’s been kicked around here, but it changes quite constantly.

We have manufacturing partners in the alliance, and they’re building products, and Google has been given some of those devices. As part of the SDK, there’s a complete hardware emulator that runs on the PC. It runs on Mac, Windows and Linux. It’s literally a hardware emulator of various devices — you know, different screen formats: horizontal, landscape, or portrait and, with the Qwerty keyboard and without a Qwerty keyboard; with touch, without touch.

Read the rest of the article, Android maker talks mashups and mobiles - ZDNet UK

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