InformationWeek is reporting that Google will announce it’s plans for the gPhone this Monday, possibly including collaborations with all the cell carriers previously mentioned (T-Mobile, Sprint, Verizon, etc.) as well as handset manufacturers.
Bring it on!
Update #1: Some prelim information before the official announcement:
USA Today has an advance story on Google’s plans to announce a new operating system, geared specifically for cellphones with partners that include Sprint, Motorola, Samsung and Japanese wireless giant NTT DoCoMo. Although details won’t be released until later today the new G-system will be based on Linux overlaid with Java and Google hopes to have a branded device ready for worldwide shipment by spring. Mobile Web browsing is notoriously slow and Google plans to change that by providing easy access to the Internet at PC-type speeds. Google plans to basically give away the software developer tools, used by programmers to write new applications. “If you’re a developer, you’ll be able to develop (applications) for the new Google Phone very quickly,” said Morgan Gillis of the LiMo Foundation. AT&T and Verizon Wireless are noticeably absent from the coalition not wanting to support a device that favors Google over other providers. Sprint, the No. 3 carrier, supports the coalition, but it hasn’t formally agreed to make the Google Phone available to its 54 million subscribers.
Update #2: It’s official! Here’s a cute movie introducing the platform that Google has been working on with a group of more than “30 technology and mobile leaders including Motorola, Qualcomm, HTC and T-Mobile”.



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December 5th, 2007 at 9:54 am
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