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bergie's Avatar
Posts: 381 | Thanked: 847 times | Joined on Jan 2007 @ Helsinki
#389
Pretty interesting piece of news from the Android side of things today:
We've been given reason to believe that the company will start by decoupling many of Android's standard applications and components from the platform's core and making them downloadable and updatable through the Market, much the same as they've already done with Maps. In all likelihood, this process will take place over two major Android versions, starting with Froyo and continuing through Gingerbread. Notice that we said apps and components, meaning that some core elements of Android -- input methods, for instance -- should get this treatment. This way, just because Google rolls out an awesome new browser doesn't mean you need to wait for HTC, Samsung, or whomever made your phone to roll it into a firmware update, and for your carrier to approve it -- almost all of the juicy user-facing stuff will happen through the Market.
isn't this pretty close to what Nokia has been saying about the relation between Fremantle, Harmattan and MeeGo? If applications are written in Qt they should be easy to provide to all the different platforms, meaning that even though OS may stagnate, new stuff will still keep coming for our N900s
 

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