Targetnya jadi os ketiga setelah android dan ios, ngalahin bb ama wp,,

Jadi bakal ngeluarin hh sendirinya? Kalonga didukung google apps bakal
sukses ga ya?

Seru nih kayanya :)

*Fork in the road: Cyanogen raises $7 million to build a better version of
Android*
http://feedly.com/k/19e0o0B

Cyanogen, makers of popular software <http://www.cyanogenmod.org/> based on
Android that extends the abilities of smartphones, is making a bid for the
mainstream. The four-year-old company, which began as a one-person side
project, said today that it has raised $7
million<http://www.cyanogenmod.org/blog/a_new_chapter%20>from
Benchmark Capital and Redpoint Ventures. The goal is to vault past
Blackberry and Windows Phone to become the third-most popular mobile
operating system, after traditional Android and iOS. And the company is
already closer than you might think.

CyanogenMod, the company’s free open-source replacement firmware, has more
than 8 million users, CEO Kirt McMaster says. But that counts only users
who have elected to share data with Cyanogen, he says, estimating that the
true number is two to three times that amount. "There’s always been lot of
talk around who’s going to be the third dominant mobile computing
platform," says McMaster, who previously co-founded Boost Mobile. "Windows
Phone would probably be number three now. If you look at what our actual
user base is, we might be equal to or greater than that." Microsoft
estimates Windows Phone’s current market share at 4
percent<http://www.theverge.com/2013/9/3/4688962/with-nokia-microsoft-wants-to-triple-windows-phone-marketshare-by-2018>.


Already bigger than Windows Phone?

Cyanogen’s growth is all the more surprising given how difficult its
software is to install. One
guide<http://wiki.cyanogenmod.org/w/Install_CM_for_maguro>lists 23
steps, and warns users that installing the firmware could damage
your phone and void your warranty. Some carriers lock device bootloaders to
prevent anyone from installing custom
ROMs<http://www.theverge.com/2013/5/4/4285884/the-keys-to-android-bootloaders-are-still-held-by-the-carriers>.
"The install process still sucks — it’s pretty brutal," says Steve Kondik,
who started building Cyanogen in 2009 while working as a developer in
Pittsburgh. He spent 19 months as a software engineer at Samsung
before quitting
in 
March<http://www.theverge.com/2013/3/25/4144226/steve-cyanogen-kondik-departs-samsung>.


But millions have waded through that process to access the benefits that
Cyanogen affords. Cyanogen brings the latest version of Android to phones
that carriers have long abandoned, helping to extend the life of the
device. It strips out bloatware installed by the carriers in favor of a
near-stock version of Android that can spruced up with thousands of themes.
More recently, Cyanogen has introduced a new camera app and a more secure
messaging system. "It’s a pretty crappy experience on Android," McMaster
says. "We think we can change that. That’s the biggest draw to
CyanogenMod."

Raising money has allowed Cyanogen to hire a team of 17, with the
developers split between Seattle and Palo Alto. Since closing their
fundraising round in April, Cyanogen has been working on two key efforts to
expand the firmware’s reach: a one-click installer for Windows, which will
help less technically savvy users when it comes out within the next few
weeks; and a partnership deal with a hardware manufacturer, which the
company plans to announce in the next week or so. It also may pick a more
consumer-friendly name; Cyanogen is considering re-branding itself next
year, McMaster says.

The company plans to re-brand itself

The company’s vision is to use Android as the foundation for an operating
system more focused on productivity than commerce. "The mobile devices out
there, they’re just not meant for anybody to use," Kondik says. "They’re
essentially mobile cash registers. We want to help you get stuff done, and
use these things to their fullest potential." Cyanogen will also place a
significant emphasis on security and privacy, Kondik says, taking pains to
help users protect their data.

The company plans to keep its firmware free. So how will it become
profitable? McMaster and Kondik say they have many ideas for generating
revenue, but declined to discuss them in depth. "If you’re the default OS
on a device and you have 50 million users, there are a lot of ways to make
money," McMaster says. "It’s not just about building a user base. It’s
about building great services you can’t get anywhere else."

But what if some of those services get blocked? Core Google apps including
Gmail, Chrome, and Maps aren’t open-sourced parts of Android — they’re part
of Google Play Services. Using Google Play Services requires that a device
be certified by
Google<http://source.android.com/faqs.html#how-can-i-get-access-to-the-google-apps-for-android-such-as-maps>.
Firmware modifications like Cyanogen bring devices into a gray area where
the original phone may have been certified, but the modified version could
fall outside Google’s guidelines.

Google hasn't commented on Cyanogen

Google hasn’t commented publicly on Cyanogen, but its relationship with the
company bears watching as the upstart tries to start peeling away market
share from the official version of Android. So does its relationship with
the carriers, who prefer a more closed device ecosystem granting them
control over the phone.

Cyanogen has a long way to go before installing aftermarket firmware is as
fun and easy as downloading *Angry Birds.* Despite the occasional flurry of
interest in new operating systems from Windows Phone, or Firefox, or
Ubuntu, there are many indications that mobile is a two-horse
race<http://blog.flurry.com/bid/97860/The-iOS-and-Android-Two-Horse-Race-A-Deeper-Look-into-Market-Share>.
But Cyanogen believes the existing players have been co-opted by carriers
and device makers, leaving room for a player willing to push them aside.
Kondik should know: he’s attracted millions of users just by building the
version of Android he himself wanted to use. "There’s a lot you can do," he
says, "whenever you listen to your users on what they want."

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