Itu semuanya hanya opini orang2 saja.
Memang di dunia internetkan kita bebas bicara apa aja.

Intinya jangan mengagungkan sesuatu yg dimana itu ciptaan manusia.
Gak ada yg sempurna, pasti ada kelebihan dan kekurangan.

*sekali lagi email saya ini juga hanya opini :-d
Regards,

Bayu Seno Adji
http://bayusenoadji.com
http://rnbwebhosting.com

-----Original Message-----
From: Andika Ikhsan <[email protected]>
Sender: [email protected]
Date: Tue, 10 Jan 2012 19:18:49 
To: <[email protected]>
Reply-To: [email protected]
Subject: [id-android] WTI - Hate Android

tadi liat twitter ada TT "Hate Android"
ternyata asalnya adalah dari artikel ini..
http://parislemon.com/post/15604811641/why-i-hate-android
jujur bahasanya rada njelimet dan ada hubungannya sama sejarah android yg
saya sendiri ga paham.. mungkin ada yg bs ngasih penjelasan soal fakta2 yg
disebut di artikel ini?


*HATE ANDROID*

Why do I hate Android? It’s definitely one of the questions I get asked
most often these days. And most of those that don’t ask probably assume
it’s because I’m an iPhone guy. People see negative take after negative
take about the operating system and label me as “unreasonable” or “biased”
or worse.

I should probably explain.

Believe it or not, I actually don’t hate Android. That is to say, I don’t
hate the *concept* of Android — in fact, at one point, I loved it. What I
hate is what Android has become. And more specifically, what Google has
done with Android.

Let’s turn back the clock. In 2006, the mobile landscape in the United
States was almost unfathomably shitty. Motorola’s RAZR had been the
top-selling device for something ridiculous like five straight years — and
the only thing that didn’t suck about it was its physical size. The
carriers completely controlled the industry. This cannot be overstated.

Then on January 9, 2007 — exactly 5 years ago today — Steve Jobs took the
stage at Macworld to unveil the iPhone. Six months later it was released.
While some laughed it off <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nXq9NTjEdTo> at
the time, the mobile landscape completely changed.

Apple and Google were great allies at the time. They united over a common
enemy: Microsoft. Then-Google CEO Eric Schmidt was even on Apple’s board of
directors. Google was a huge part of original iPhone OS (before it was
called iOS): Google Maps, YouTube, Google Search, etc. Apple could have
launched the iPhone without Google, but it wouldn’t have been as good. And
if they had to do something like build their own maps from scratch, it
would have taken longer.

A few months later, on November 5, 2007, Google teamed up with many of the
big players in the mobile/telecom space to announce the Open Handset
Alliance. At the time it sounded promising, but perhaps it should have been
the first warning sign. The first product of this partnership: Android. A
beta was released, but it would take almost another year before the
software was actually ready to go.

The initial Android
prototypes<http://gizmodo.com/334909/google-android-prototype-in-the-wild?tag=gadgetsandroidhardwareinthewild>looked
a lot like BlackBerry devices (both in hardware and software). But
the first device (the G1) and OS actually released was more of a cross
between a T-Mobile Sidekick (which Android head Andy Rubin helped create
while still a co-founder at
Danger<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danger_%28company%29>)
and the iPhone OS.

In hindsight, Steve Jobs was clearly not happy about
this<http://www.zdnet.com/blog/btl/steve-jobs-android-a-stolen-product/61504>and
the subsequent iPhone-ification of Android. But great artists steal,
etc, etc. The only thing I didn’t like about Android at the time was that
it was a *shitty* copy of the iPhone. It was something you couldn’t pay me
to use. And most people seemed to feel the same way.

Jobs probably didn’t say much at the time because he didn’t have to. The
market was saying it.

Time went on and it was pretty clear that despite the major players
involved in the OHA, Android wasn’t getting a lot of traction. Meanwhile,
the iPhone, after a price-cut and addition of 3G technology, was soaring.
So Google did the logical thing, they went to see Verizon, the largest U.S.
carrier, and struck a
deal<http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/33192558/ns/technology_and_science-tech_and_gadgets/t/verizon-google-android-partnership/#.Twuk997uYug>
.

Remember, Apple still had an agreement with AT&T for exclusive iPhone
rights in the U.S. at the time. Verizon and Google needed each other. But
Google clearly needed Verizon more. This was the first real problem. A deal
with the devil was struck.

Let’s back up for a second.

Even before Android’s launch, Google clearly had big dreams for the mobile
space. “Your mobile phone should be free,” Eric Schmidt
told<http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/15700344/>Reuters in late 2006. He
envisioned a world in which consumers didn’t have
to pay for their mobile phones — advertising (served by Google, naturally)
would subsidize the cost. And we’re not talking “free” with a two-year
carrier contract. We’re talking *free* free.

In the pre-iPhone world this may have sounded like crazy-talk. But
remember, as an Apple board member and having purchased Android for Google
in 2005, Schmidt knew what was coming down the pipe. He absolutely intended
to disrupt the mobile market.

But again, the initial releases of Android simply didn’t have the traction
needed to come close to fulfilling Schmidt’s (and Google’s) dream. So deals
with the carriers had to be made.

Still, Google hung on to the hope of a free phone. That phone was called
the Nexus One.

At an event in January of 2010, Google unveiled their plan for Nexus One —
the first real “Google Phone” as it were. While they were cautious and
cagey with some details, the goal seemed clear: Google intended to blow up
the carrier market (in the U.S. first) by moving phone distribution online,
flattening it in the process. The idea was that you’d go to a website and
pick the phone you wanted, then pick the *carrier* you wanted, pay, and
you’d be done.

Think about this for a second. Instead of going to the store of a single
carrier and having a dozen shitty phones shoved in your face by salespeople
that made commission, you’d be in total control of the process. The end
result of consumers getting to choose their carriers (and phones and plans)
was clear: major competition and subsequently a rush of better deals from
said carriers to ensure customer activation and retention.

Or, you could buy whatever phone you wanted *unlocked*. Eventually,
pay-as-you-go SIM cards would pop up in the U.S. as a result.

This was to be the dawn of the golden age of mobile in this country. As I
wrote at the time: Apple And Google Just Tag Teamed The U.S.
Carriers<http://techcrunch.com/2010/01/05/apple-google-carriers/>.
I loved it.

But it was never meant to be.

What should have been obvious at the time but for whatever reason wasn’t
(maybe because carrier representatives were at the event), the carriers
hated this plan. And for good reason — it was going to turn them into dumb
pipes that competed on price. There was no way they were going to let this
fly, and they didn’t. Within a few months, citing weak sales of the Nexus
One, Google scrapped their ambitious website and instead got fully in bed
with the carriers.

But there was more.

What no one knew at the time, and I only heard months
later<http://techcrunch.com/2010/09/10/google-nexus-one/>,
was Google’s original vision for the Nexus One. Google intended to sell it
for $99 without a contract and unlocked. Yes, a $99 unlocked phone,
subsidized by Google ads.

But the plan had one little problem: Google didn’t operate their own
cellular network. They needed Verizon or AT&T or Sprint or T-Mobile to help
them out. Google probably thought their open spectrum deal
“win”<http://venturebeat.com/2008/03/20/did-google-trick-verizon-into-spending-billions-for-a-spectrum-auction-win/>in
early 2008 gave them the leverage they needed here. Sadly, it did not.

All of the carriers laughed in Google’s face when presented with the
ambitious Nexus One plan. And given that Google had just signed the
all-important deal with Verizon, it was never going to happen.

So instead, at the Nexus One launch we got a website where you could indeed
buy an unlocked Android phone — for $529. Nonstarter.

Better yet, while they said they were committed at the time, Verizon and
Sprint never even got around to supporting the Nexus One *at all*. That’s
how much they were behind the project.

To complicate matters further, behind the scenes, Verizon and Google were
arguing over Net Neutrality rules. Verizon was opposed, Google was in
favor. Then a funny thing happened. Google started supporting Verizon’s
viewpoint on the matter! If you’re looking for the first post where I’m
really, truly, pissed off at Google, look no further.

It. Was. Total. Fucking.
Bullshit.<http://techcrunch.com/2010/08/13/google-net-neutrality/>

A few months later, guess what happened? Thanks to the Google/Verizon
alliance on the matter, the FCC decided the compromised vision of Net
Neutrality was just fine
also<http://techcrunch.com/2010/12/21/verizon-google-fcc-net-neutrality/>.
To be clear: Net Neutrality was thrown out in the wireless space because
Google sided with Verizon’s ridiculous and horribly conflicted stance on
the matter.

The open spectrum enemy, turned Net Neutrality enemy, became Google’s
bedmate thanks to a business deal. Straight up. Greed, for lack of a better
word, is good.

We got all of this thanks to Google’s desire for Android to take over the
world. I commented earlier that they signed a deal with the devil — I
wasn’t being facetious. They actually did! And they got away with it!

I think about these things everyday that I see positive news about Android.
It’s so wonderful that the platform which helped cripple Net Neutrality and
is keeping the evil carriers in control is taking off. Make no mistake:
Android is now the carriers’ best friend.

Because Google sloppily decided to do the Motorola deal (driven by the
full-on patent war <http://techcrunch.com/2011/07/09/vesper/>, for which
Apple and Microsoft, and not Google, are largely to blame), and because the
model isn’t great for all but the biggest
player<http://parislemon.com/post/15418182445/one-out-of-three-aint-bad>,
now the OEMs may be our best hope against the carrier/Android alliance.

Eventually, many of them will try to do their own thing (perhaps even using
Android as a base) because they’re not idiots, they see where the real
money is: controlling the entire experience. Like Apple.

All of this backstory knowledge fuels my rage. When I see Google talk about
how “open” the platform is <http://techcrunch.com/2010/09/09/android-open/>,
setting it up as the foil to the “closed” (and framed as “evil”) iPhone, I
want to scream and rip someone’s head off. It’s not only the most extreme
example of being disingenuous that I can ever recall seeing — it’s nuclear
bullshit.

Apple, for all the shit they get for being “closed” and “evil”, has
actually done far more to wrestle control back from the carriers and put it
into the hands of consumers. Google set off to help in this goal, then
stabbed us all in the back and went the complete other way, to the side of
the carriers. And because they smiled the entire time they were doing it
and fed us this “open” bullshit, we thanked them for it. We’re still
thanking them for it!

When you think about it in the context of this election season we’re
entering, it’s a brilliant political maneuver that Google has pulled off
with Android. They’ve taken something they’ve done that’s actually bad for
us and spun it in such a way that most people actually buy into it being
good for us.

And for the carriers, Android is the best thing ever because it’s the
new “opiate
for the masses <http://parislemon.com/post/15200195253/clopen>”. Everything
shitty they’re doing is great because they’re doing it with Android — at
least it’s not iOS. What a load of horseshit.

I realize that the Android team at Google has a lot of good people doing
great work. I know some of them. I respect them. But I cannot respect their
decision to continue to work on this platform that perpetuates our
imprisonment. I have to believe most simply chose not to think about these
things. But they should. They really should.

There’s no denying that there are upsides to open — a lot of them. But in
the case of Android, “open <http://techcrunch.com/2011/03/26/open/>” has
been hijacked and wildly contorted so as to mask the shady side of what’s
really been going on. And it’s working.

So that, ladies and gentleman, is why I hate Android. It has nothing to do
with the actual product (which continues to improve every year and is quite
good now <http://techcrunch.com/2011/12/14/iphone-galaxy-nexus-review/>).
It has to do with a promise that was broken and swept under the rug.

As crazy as it may sound to some of you, beyond a full OEM revolt (which
could ultimately benefit the carriers as well), our hope now lies with
Apple and Microsoft.

Apple, because they put the consumer first and have proven time and time
again that they will not bend to carrier bullshit and will often work
against them behind the scenes. And they control the all-important Apple
stores for distribution (and, of course, the App Store).

Microsoft, because they have a model (many handsets on all carriers) that
can potentially scale better than Apple’s can while still giving control
(mostly) to the users. And they have Nokia on board with their plan. And
they have intersections with products like Xbox. (Though it may be too late
in the 
U.S.<http://parislemon.com/post/14840209963/the-windows-phone-problem-in-three-words-way-too-late>
)

Perhaps more people will relate to this: I hate Android for the same reason
that Severus Snape hates Harry Potter — the very sight reminds me of
something so beautiful, that was taken. Except it’s worse. It’s as if Harry
Potter has grown up to become Voldemort.

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===============
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--------------------------
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--------------------
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--------------------
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