http://goo.gl/bj0O

The new batch of forthcoming Android tablets are all sporting the new
version of Android (2.2, or Froyo). But Google says that this version
of Android wasn’t optimized for tablets. This means three things for
folks interested in buying an Android tablet this fall.

First: If your tablet is built to certain hardware specifications —
specifically, those of an oversized smartphone — you’re good.
Samsung’s much-anticipated Galaxy Tab fits the bill, as it really is
just a Galaxy smartphone with a much larger screen. If you’re
wondering (like I was) why the Galaxy Tab had phone-call capability
and was laid out in portrait rather than landscape, there’s your
answer.

Second: Functionally, the biggest hurdle is that most tablets won’t be
able to use the Android Market, Google’s official store for Android
apps. This actually makes sense, as not all of the apps on the market
will work each tablet’s different hardware. But luckily, Android,
unlike Apple’s iOS, is wide open. There are plenty of other ways to
get Android apps onto your machine, including other app stores.

Third: Hugo Barra, Google’s director of mobile products, stopped just
short of saying that the 3.0 and 3.5 versions of Android, also known
as Gingerbread and Honeycomb (Android OS names make me hungry for
breakfast cereal), would be optimized for tablets, and presumably
there will either be a tablet version or tablet section of the Android
Market at that time.

But he also didn’t quite say that. We can play Kremlinology all we
want, and suppose that Google is sending subtly coded messages to
consumers to wait for the next OS to buy an Android tablet, but it’s
quite possible that Google just isn’t sure when or even if it can
support a marketplace for everybody’s hardware.

This is the great and frustrating thing about having a wide-open
gadget ecology for a platform. On the one hand, you’ve got a much
wider variety of hardware options and price points; on the other, it’s
much more difficult to provide an easy, unified consumer experience.
That’s where we are with Android tablets, and where we’re likely to be
next year, too.



Read More 
http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2010/09/your-froyo-tablet-probably-wont-support-the-android-market/#ixzz0zBLEPLuC

-- 
Salam,


Agus Hamonangan

http://groups.google.com/group/id-android
http://groups.google.com/group/id-gtug
Gtalk  : id.android
Follow : @agushamonangan
E-mail :  [email protected]

-- 
"Indonesian Android Community [id-android]" 

Join: http://groups.google.com/group/id-android/subscribe?hl=en-GB  
Moderator: [email protected]
Peraturan Jual dan Kloteran ID-Android  http://goo.gl/azW7
ID Android Developer: http://groups.google.com/group/id-android-dev
ID Android Surabaya: http://groups.google.com/group/id-android-sby
ID Android on FB: http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=112207700729

Kirim email ke