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Introduction. What is Android? Pros and Cons Why is it important? Why develop for Android? Programming model Tools Documentation Critical appraisal. Geekandpoke 2009. Game Changers. Geekandpoke 2009. What is Android?.
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Nic Shulver, FCET, Staffordshire University Introduction • What is Android? • Pros and Cons • Why is it important? • Why develop for Android? • Programming model • Tools • Documentation • Critical appraisal Geekandpoke 2009
Nic Shulver, FCET, Staffordshire University Game Changers Geekandpoke 2009
Nic Shulver, FCET, Staffordshire University What is Android? • “Android is a software stack for mobile devices that includes an operating system, middleware and key applications.” • “The Android SDK provides the tools and APIs necessary to begin developing applications on the Android platform using the Java programming language.” • From Google's Android Developer Docs, 2010 • http://developer.android.com/guide/basics/what-is-android.html
Nic Shulver, FCET, Staffordshire University Pros and Cons • Many different Android devices, more being developed all the time • Backed by Google, one of the world's biggest and most powerful IT companies • Google is deliberately “disruptive” • Free development environment for low cost of entry • Free OS for hardware developers • But are the points above “pro” or “con”?
Nic Shulver, FCET, Staffordshire University Pros and Cons • Although Android can be used on non-smartphone devices, they are not supported by Google • Devices must support quite a rich mix of capabilities in order to be certified as Android compatible • Only compatible devices can access the growing Android Market for apps
Nic Shulver, FCET, Staffordshire University Why is it important? • In a November 2007 article entitled “Analysis: Long odds for Google's ambitious Android” Tom Yager makes some interesting points: • “Google, whose future depends on a pervasive cross-platform mobile applications model ... has an obvious need to create a cross-platform mobile SDK for its own use.” • “It's no great leap of logic that if Google requires a standard platform to support its mobile applications, manufacturers and carriers have a strong financial incentive to get in line.”
Nic Shulver, FCET, Staffordshire University Why is it important? • Market share (of smartphones): In the US, up from 27% in November 2009 to 42% in February 2010 • In the US, Apple's iPhone lead fell from 55% to 44% in Nov 2009 to Feb 2010. • Worldwide, iPhone holds 50% of smartphone market share [Feb 2010] • Android has about 24%, up from 16% in the previous year.
Nic Shulver, FCET, Staffordshire University Why develop for Android? • The Android Market is open to all applications • No screening except for illegal content • No controls on applications which compete with Google • Android explicitly allows new components to replace old ones, even at the OS level • The downside is that some apps are very poor quality, check user feedback scores • Explicit content is allowed – see recent (Mar 2010) comments by Apple CEO
Nic Shulver, FCET, Staffordshire University Programming model • Android is built on: • Linux kernel • The Dalvik Runtime (Java SE compatible) • The Android APIs • A minimum-spec hardware platform • Android software is: • Multi-threaded • Interruptible • Written in standard Java
Nic Shulver, FCET, Staffordshire University Tools • The Android SDK comes with: • A plug-in for Eclipse • A configurable emulator • Extensive documentation • A large array of example applications and services • You don't need a phone to write for Android, you can just use the emulator – it's very good
Nic Shulver, FCET, Staffordshire University Critical appraisal • Android is tightly regulated by Google at the hardware level • But Android is an open system for developers • The success of Android has surprised many • Much of the success may be down to: • Apple's iPhone, opening a new market sector • Apple and its over-controlling nature • Microsoft's inactivity and ball-dropping • Google's aggressive development
Nic Shulver, FCET, Staffordshire University Reading, references, links • Analysis: “Long odds for Google's ambitious Android” By Tom Yager, InfoWorld, Nov 2007http://www.infoworld.com/t/business/analysis-long-odds-googles-ambitious-android-723 • Wired Gadget Lab: “Android Devices Crave Google’s Attention” By Priya Ganapati, Mar 2010http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2010/03/android-devices-crave-googles-attention/ • Android “Porn Store” Claims: EuroDroid 2010http://www.eurodroid.com/2010/04/steve-jobs-theres-a-porn-store-for-android/ • Android Developer's Guidehttp://developer.android.com/guide/index.html • Geek & Poke Cartoons:http://geekandpoke.typepad.com/geekandpoke/