Poll

In terms of inkjet, laser, photo and multifunctional printers, I'd recommend to a friend or colleague these manufacturers (choose as many as you like):

View poll results

Have your say in the
PC Advisor forums!

Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...

News

July 8, 2008

Google Android installed on Nokia's N810

Developer puts OS on open-source smartphone

Nancy Gohring

Developers have created an easy way to load Google's Android smartphone operating system onto Nokia's N810 open-source handheld devices.

The development is of interest to people who are trying to build applications for Android, rather than for general users. "So, from the point of view of someone who just wants to use his N800 and doesn't necessarily want to experiment for the sake of experimenting, what does running Android get me?" one person asked on the Internet Tablet Talk website that is sharing the technique for loading the software on the devices.

"Probably not much," a respondent wrote back. In the future, however, it means that anyone could decide to run Android on the devices and use applications developed for the OS, the respondent said.

Analysis: Google's Android mobile strategy explained

Google Android phones delayed

For developers, the discovery is exciting. "Testing on a physical device is way different than testing in an emulator," said Mike Rowehl, a mobile developer who has loaded Android on his N810.

In addition, he thinks this is an important move that indicates the success of the open-source model. "By virtue of building on open-source platforms already well-represented in terms of active projects, developers have been able to get Android up and running on physical hardware," he said.

The N810 devices run on Maemo Linux, and Android is based on Linux. Since most smartphones come with closed operating systems, users typically can't simply remove and replace OSes, as developers were able to do. Because Android isn't yet complete, no actual phones running the software are available.

In April, developers also posted information about loading Android onto the Nokia tablets on the elinux.org website. However, the process was complicated. The new installer makes it much easier for people to load the software onto the devices.

The N810 has a larger form factor than a mobile phone, but is much smaller than a laptop. The initial release of the line of internet tablets, the N770, by Nokia raised some eyebrows because the devices don't include cellular connectivity. They have Wi-Fi, however, and users can connect a mobile phone to the N810 via Bluetooth for mobile access.

For more mobile phone news, reviews and tutorials, see Mobile Advisor

Keep up to date by adding PC Advisor News to your iGoogle home page or Google Reader

What is this?

<<newer story | back to index | older story>>

Subscribe to PC Advisor now and claim your FREE gift


Google

Broadband?

Compare 50+ broadband packages. Enter your postcode below:

Powered by Top 10 Broadband

Recent reviews

Reviews index


Latest reader comments

Latest reader comments


Top news

News index


Latest blog entries

Blogs index


 Our RSS feeds

Sponsored Content