Thanks to everybody who has contributed to the discussion so far, particularly 
to Sean for his well researched post on Android developments.

The choices as I understand:
0) Do not have an Android transition plan
1) A suite of Activities with a common look and feel but leave things like file 
management to Android 
2) A suite of Activities which share a common Journal and Neighbourhood
3) Sugar on Ubuntu on Android (or similar)

What prompted me to hijack a thread on multiple instances in html5 is that the 
discussion is continuing on a technical level: html5, webapps, Chrome but is 
relatively inaccessable to people like me with minimal coding skills.

What would the user experience be like under these options?

Take the minimalist option, a suite of stand alone activities using the Android 
desktop. Previously a Sugar Activity (1)Runs on Sugar (2)Is open source 
(3)Preferably but not necessarily conforms to the Sugar look and feel. Would 
the Sugar name be licenced to any educational app that conforms to (2)? Would 
you download it from the Google Store or ASLO?

Should Sugar Activities conform to the existing Android look and feel: a long 
press for copy and paste, a menu button, power+home = screenshot?

Take the more comprehensive solution incorporating the Journal. Would the 
Journal run and install as a stand alone app? Would the Journal be built into 
every Activity? Would the Journal be included with every installer file and 
install as a separate app the first time you install a Sugar Activity? Would 
the Journal communicate with the Android file system the same way it does now 
with Gnome through 'Documents'? What about things like inserting images from 
file, would the journal object selector also give an Android file selector 
option?

The issue of the considerable resources required to transition to Android has 
been raised. Is there any possibility of getting financial support from Google 
or Samsung etc for the project?

I would like to see all these questions discussed further. I would like the 
technical implementation discussions to be more contextualised in terms of user 
experience.

Thanks again for all the contributions to this discussion.

Tony

PS. I wrote some html5 code but was disappointed that my Samsung Galaxy S3 
browser does not support html5
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