I started my project in J2ME before Android was announced. Firstly
Android is designed for the next generation of phones - with more
power and more flexibility than J2ME will provide. By basing the
system on Linux in can continue to grow. Secondly all other platforms
are closed. I considered and rejected writing for mobiles a few years
ago because it was difficult and expensive. Even the latest offerings
like the iPhone leave developers with a limited closed environment. In
the end Android is about applications. The iPhone has taken the market
by storm with style. Windows Mobile has been around long enough to
gather a following. Android will provide a platform for applicaiton
development. In the end if it has 10 times as many applications as the
other platforms it will get a large market place. Being open source is
a feature not a benefit. The benefit to the phone buyer is what he or
she can do with Android they can't do with the others.

On Apr 6, 10:03 am, "Dan U." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Yeah, we've heard that. However, I'm still waiting to hear a rundown of what
> > exactly the technical deficiencies of existing projects were that were
> > sufficient to convince Google that *everything *pretty much needed to be
> > written from scratch (thus unquestionably adding to fragmentation, whether
> > that was the goal or not.)
>
> I'm not a J2ME developer, but I've heard a lot of complaints about
> J2ME. That might have been a reason for Google to do this.
>
> As for what Jha said, it might have been taken out of context or maybe
> "fragmentation" was a poor word choice. It might be Googles intention
> to keep other companies from holding a monopoly in the mobile world. I
> really don't know if that's the intention, but in my mind it is a good
> reason. It gives consumers more choice.
>
> On Apr 5, 4:16 pm, "Stone Mirror" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > 2008/4/5 Dan Morrill <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>
> > > Jha is not a Google employee, and does not speak for Google; at best, he
> > > might be speaking for his own company.  His statements as quoted are
> > > obviously way out of step with the real objectives of Android, and are his
> > > personal speculation insofar as they mention Google.
>
> > However, he _is_ the COO of Qualcomm, a member of the "Open Handset
> > Alliance". Presumably members of OHA have more insight into the motivations
> > behind Android than those of us on the street do.
>
> > Or do the members of OHA other than Google have nothing to say about
> > Android...?
>
> > > The sole goal of the Android project is to produce a high-quality, fully
> > > open platform designed from top to bottom for mobile.  Google is involved
> > > because we want to help build the kind of platform we want to use.
>
> > Yeah, we've heard that. However, I'm still waiting to hear a rundown of what
> > exactly the technical deficiencies of existing projects were that were
> > sufficient to convince Google that *everything *pretty much needed to be
> > written from scratch (thus unquestionably adding to fragmentation, whether
> > that was the goal or not.)
>
> > I'm on the fence about this. It seems totally plausible in a high-level
> > corporate strategy kind of way--particularly since Google's expertise is a
> > lot more about web apps than cellphone platforms--but it reduces Android to
> > nothing more than a stalking horse, a throwaway meant to confuse the field
> > enough that they'll--like Michael
> > Mace<http://mobileopportunity.blogspot.com/2008/02/mobile-applications-rip...>--become
> > convinced that web-based development is the only way to get things done.
>
> > > 2008/4/5 Stone Mirror <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>
> > > According to Sanjay Jha, COO of Qualcomm's chipset division, as quoted in 
> > > this
> > > > article in *The 
> > > > Register*<http://www.theregister.co.uk/2008/04/03/android_qualcomm/>,
> > > > it was Google's goal from the outset to *create, *not reduce,
> > > > fragmentation in the mobile software space with its introduction of 
> > > > Android.
> > > > Qualcomm is, of course, a member of the Open Handset Alliance.
>
> > > > "Google *wants *fragmentation in the industry," according to Jha.
>
> > > > Why? Maybe there's a clue in Robert Love's presentation at last summer's
> > > > GUADEC in Birmingham, where he extolled a vision of the future where all
> > > > data would be web-based and accessed through web-based applications
> > > > (incidentally an area that Google has been pushing for a couple of years
> > > > now.) This raised some significant objections, around areas like
> > > > accessibility (Robert suggested that Google Gears could address this, 
> > > > which
> > > > really begs the question of why one would  base stuff on the web in the
> > > > first place) but more significantly, on grounds relating to privacy and
> > > > security (a pretty sketchy area for Google, to begin with). There was
> > > > general agreement that putting corporate data on a Google-owned 
> > > > web-based
> > > > resource would be not only foolish, but completely legitimate grounds 
> > > > for a
> > > > quick sacking. Robert had no real response to this criticism.
>
> > > > So, I'd love to hear from someone at Google about this. Was Android
> > > > cynically intended from the outset to make life easier for Google by 
> > > > trying
> > > > to marginalize the legitimate community-based efforts that it derided as
> > > > being "not good enough" to meet its needs when it first started to think
> > > > about the direction it wanted to take in mobile? Was it more that they
> > > > weren't "Google-controlled enough" rather than "good enough"? Is Android
> > > > mainly intended to be a stumbling block for the rest of the industry?
>
> > > > What happened to "Don't be evil"...?
>
> > > > --
> > > > 鏡石
>
> > --
> > 鏡石
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