*What Google really means when it calls Android 'open'*

Google loves to woo app makers to Android by whispering the sweet sounds of
"openness" and "open source" in their ears. While that's not entirely
accurate, they heed the call for good reasons.


Is Android fully open? Well, no, but quasi-open gets most developers to
exactly where they want to be. (Credit: CNET)



The gooey center of Google's pitch to developers to make apps and services
for Android is a series of terms easily misunderstood, but central to
Android's flexibility and success.


Every once in a while, Android
<http://www.cnet.com/android-atlas/>terminology discussions flare up
like a stomach ulcer for Google. They
center on Android's nature as a development platform, which in turn affects
the variety and breadth of Android apps -- from Minecraft to Pandora to the
latest Flappy Bird copycats -- that you can download, and how up-to-date
they are. Is Android truly open-source? Can you "fork" Android? What does
Google mean when it talks about Android's "openness"?


The latest debate was sparked by recently discovered documents that
reveal<http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052702304888404579378850231234912?mg=reno64-wsj&url=http%3A%2F%2Fonline.wsj.com%2Farticle%2FSB10001424052702304888404579378850231234912.html>stringent
restrictions on device makers that want access to Google's search
engine, the video service YouTube, and more than a million apps found in
the Google Play app store. European antitrust authorities are looking at
whether Google has unfairly taken advantage of Android's position to push
its own services and apps, according to The Wall Street Journal.


"The question of how you define 'openness' depends on what you want
'openness' to mean."
--Avi Greengart, analyst


The source, if you will, of Android's problems is its "open source" nature
and a fundamental misunderstanding of what Google is doing with Android. So
let's take a look at what we're really talking about when we talk about
"open source" and "openness."


Openness is both a lure for developers, who want to create freely, and a
trap that Google has built for itself. It's a term that the company uses to
describe its approach to Android, but because it's a fairly common term
it's come to mean different things to different people. As such, it's
highly dependent on their interests.


"The question of how you define 'openness' depends on what you want
'openness' to mean," said Avi Greengart, an analyst at Current Analysis.
"Do you want to be part of the process to define the software from the
outset? Do you want to create a phone that exemplifies the best of Android
and Google services together?"


Google's approach to Android development and the Android ecosystem promotes
an atypical definition of the terms. The easier one to explain is how
Android relates to open source.


Historically, open source coding projects large and small have been
developed and managed by communities open to all.
Firefox<http://www.cnet.com/firefox-3/>and Linux are prime examples of
that. The Android Open Source Project, or
AOSP, is the Android code made available to all.


Linux is the basis for Android, but Android has a key difference. It's
developed behind closed doors at Google, and then once new versions are
ready, they're made available to the public. It's the biggest and possibly
the only open-source project developed this way. There's often a short
delay between a new Android version being completed and when the code is
made public, and there's rarely any public input on Android code before
release.


Open and openness in the Android world are a bit more nebulous. Google's
argument is that Android is open because the code is opened to all, because
Google doesn't charge for the platform, and because developers have access
to it all. The only restriction is on Google services, for which the
company demands that phone makers conform to certain specifications.


Google's take on Android is that they make it as open as possible. Dianne
Hackborn, a tech lead on Android at Google who has worked on Android since
its early days, recently commented at length on Android development,
openness, and how AOSP relates to Android with Google services
integrated<http://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2014/02/neither-microsoft-nokia-nor-anyone-else-should-fork-android-its-unforkable/?comments=1&start=80>.



"One of the things that is interesting about platforms today versus the
traditional desktop is that these cloud services are becoming increasingly
central to the core platform experience," she said. "This presents a
special challenge to an open-source platform, which can't really provide
such cloud services as part of the standard platform implementation."


The tension between the quasi-open-source operating system and access to
proprietary cloud services, including programming hooks called Application
Programming Interfaces (APIs), and encompassing Google apps such as the
Play Store, Google Music, and Google Maps, fuels much of the debate over
Android's openness. This didn't matter so much five years ago, when few
people used Android and cloud services weren't as popular or necessary, but
modern Android is explosively popular and heavily reliant on the cloud. You
can look no further than the appeal of the Nexus
5<http://reviews.cnet.com/google-nexus-5/>and its Google Now
integration for evidence of that.


 Eleven of Google's key members of its Android mobile operating system team
took questions from developers at the 2013 Google I/O conference in San
Francisco. (Credit: CNET/Stephen Shankland)


Hackborn argues that AOSP is able to power any phone out of the box.

"AOSP is far more than the basic bones of a smartphone operating system. It
is a complete smartphone operating system," she said. "The fact is, if you
build AOSP today and put it on a phone, you will have a pretty fully
functioning platform." She noted that AOSP includes smartphone essentials
like a home screen launcher, contacts directory, dialer and phone app,
camera and gallery.


Phone manufacturers and carriers that want to use Google's services must
conform to Google's device standards, a stricter requirement than what
basic AOSP requires. For some, this is a catch. For others, it's merely the
cost of doing business.


The other component to Android's claim of openness is the Google Play Store
ecosystem, said Abhisek Devkota, community manager at
CyanogenMod<http://cyanogenmod.com/>,
arguably the most successful of the custom-compiled versions of Android.


"The ecosystem creates a level playing field," he said. "As an app
developer, I can take my app to any store and get the distribution I need.
I still have flexibility."


To get access to Google's Play Store apps, all you have to do is install
the Play Store. By running the app, you're agreeing to Google's terms of
service, but at no point are you or the developer of your favorite app
compelled to use or install Google's preferred marketplace.


The Google Play Store is how Google makes its money on Android, not Android
itself. (Credit: Google)


*Forks and fragmentation*
Devkota pointed out that several Android forks, such as the version that
runs on Amazon's Kindle Fire and ones used by Chinese phone makers, do not
use Google services. But what are they?


A source fork occurs when a developer takes the source code in a new or
different direction. There are dozens of publicly available Android forks,
built each time that a developer publishes newly recompiled code. Each time
that new AOSP code gets published by Google, it's up to the developer to
integrate it into a new build.


Android fragmentation occurs when a phone ceases to receive Android
operating system updates, often because operating system updates encounter
compatibility problems with older hardware. Most often, this comes at the
hands of the carriers, although Google does cease to develop new code as
well. Currently, the biggest fragmentation split is between Android 4.0 Ice
Cream Sandwich and above, and Android 2.3 Gingerbread.


Last year, Google introduced a new framework to the Play Store so that more
apps could be backward-compatible with older versions of Android. However,
only about a quarter of top-tier apps use it, said Ben Bajarin, of the
analysis firm Creative Solutions.


"My mom and dad use Android phones. One of them is on my software, the
other is on stock Nexus software. If I asked them to tell me the
differences, they wouldn't be able to."
--Abhisek Devkota, CyanogenMod


"Most app stores are curated," he said, including Amazon's store and the
most popular of the Chinese app markets. Nevertheless, he said, "most
Android developers won't adopt the framework because they don't even adopt
Google's best practices to begin with."


Hackborn defends Google's right to include proprietary services, and to
keep them proprietary, saying that its no different than any other
proprietary app on Android. That's not entirely true, since Google does
keep some API development to itself, but to its credit the company does
open-source most of the new APIs introduced to Android.


Google may push its suite of services, including Maps, Gmail, Search
including Google Now, Calendar, and Drive, but it's hardly forcing AOSP
developers to use them. If you buy the Oppo N1
smartphone<http://news.cnet.com/8301-1035_3-57616188-94/google-gives-thumbs-up-to-first-cyanogen-phone/>that
comes with Devkota's CyanogenMod, it does have Google services on it,
but most people come to CyanogenMod by installing it by hand. From there,
if you want Google services, you have to install them yourself.


"My mom and dad use Android phones. One of them is on my software, the
other is on stock Nexus software. If I asked them to tell me the
differences, they wouldn't be able to," Devkota said.


It's certainly possible that Google will pull more default Android apps
into the new Play Store framework, even core apps like the Dialer and
Contact List. It could build features into those services that make them
the best in class, and it could even give them an unfair advantage over
similar apps made by competing developers.


However, Android runs on more kinds of hardware than just about any other
operating system out there. Not just phones and tablets, but refrigerators
and ovens and cameras, just to get started. Google may not make money on
them, but to suddenly undercut years of talk of "openness" to drive people
to Google services would be a massive shift for the company.


Is it possible? Sure. But it's as likely as Apple shipping an iPhone
running Android.


 *Update, 9:15 a.m. PT* *Added more details on AOSP*.


 <http://www.cnet.com/profile/srosenblatt/>

Seth Rosenblatt <http://www.cnet.com/profile/srosenblatt/>
Senior writer Seth Rosenblatt covers Google and security for CNET News,
with occasional forays into tech and pop culture. Formerly a CNET Reviews
senior editor for software, he has written about nearly every category of
software and app available.

-- 
==========
ID-Android on YouTube
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0u81L8Qpy5A 
--------------------
Aturan Umum  ID-ANDROID >> http://goo.gl/NfzSGB

Join Forum   ID-ANDROID >> http://forum.android.or.id
==========
--- 
Anda menerima pesan ini karena Anda berlangganan grup "[id-android] Indonesian 
Android Community " dari Grup Google.
Untuk berhenti berlangganan dan berhenti menerima email dari grup ini, kirim 
email ke id-android+berhenti [email protected] .
Kunjungi grup ini di http://groups.google.com/group/id-android.

Kirim email ke