The simple technical advantage (at least in my view) is that Mer uses
native development (C/C++) as a first class citizen, while Android
advocates using Java/Dalvik, leaving NDK as a secondary option. Also,
Android applications suffer from non being portable, unless Dalvik VM is
released for various platforms which is far from reality yet. Qt on the
other hand is already ported on a wide variety of platforms (even
including Android), and therefore Qt applications are more portable in
theory.

Regards,

Hillel.


On 01/23/2012 10:09 PM, Hui Zhang wrote:
>
> thank Hillel's reply!
> from this point of view,if vendors chose android,they cannot benefit
> from some efforts of linux community,and so abducted by android in
> some extent. As far as openness is concerned,Mer is better than android.
> but does Mer have some techinical advantage over android? or just a
> good replacement for android without any techinical advantage?
>
>

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