With the handset released, and a carrier on board, the next thing
Google needs to do is to win back its developer community. After
announcing ADC I results, Google completely focussed on their ~200
winning developers (say avg 4 per team) and left the majority of the
developer community out in the cold; many of who might have moved to
other platforms.

At this point, offering a handset and a one year data plan sounds like
a wise step to reach out to ADC I participants (read - a wider
developer community). Developers will feel rewarded for the 1000 or so
hours they put of their own time in being Google's "unofficial" beta
testers of the SDK. And maybe Google could also offer some official
beta testing of apps this time, so higher quality apps can be hosted
with higher confidence by the carrier.

On Sep 23, 10:58 pm, "Shane Isbell" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Tue, Sep 23, 2008 at 7:30 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>wrote:
>
>
>
> > Treatment of ADC participants as existing T-Mobile customers has low
> > cost, attracts developers to the T-Mobile location aware network, and
> > serve Google's best interest in every way.
>
> Google couldn't even get an invite for plusminus to today's T-Mobile
> announcement. Why would you think they could get 1800 devices and developer
> plans from T-Mobile?
>
> Shane
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