Personally I value non-anonymity. I want my software to be used widely
- and recognition by Google will help that enormously. The prize money
is to pay for the next step - making the software completely ready for
real hardware. Google want Android to succeed - and Android is much
more likely to succeed with lots of software that people want to use.
So, Google will want to showcase your work.

On a practical note, register a business name and enter as a business
entity. That will be the name attached to your product - and the one
that will be published.

On Mar 26, 5:26 am, marvin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Given the near certainty of my (and your) success in winning the
> Android Challenge, I spend a lot of time thinking about the
> consequences of said success. Fact is, I spend a lot more time
> thinking about impending victory than coding.
>
> (The ratio is somewhere around 9:1. That's 9 parts daydreaming, 1 part
> coding. I could write a whole paper on the incestuous mathematics of
> that self-destructive ratio, probably something about chaos,
> definitely a mandelbrot or two, but I'll spare you.)
>
> So my question: when I win, can I be anonymous? Do all my friends and
> relatives really have to know what I've been up to in the seclusion of
> my inner sanctum? Must I be thrust unwillingly into the limelight?
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