Google will be increasing its control over the Android platform in order to reduce and eliminate fragmentation across carriers and manufacturers after years of allowing the aforementioned to do as they saw fit, which has lead to problems with device support and carrier customizations that have hampered customer satisfaction.
According to the report filed by Bloomberg Businessweek, Google has been meeting with its key OHA partners over the past few months and laid down the law regarding its policies and has decided to exercise more control over the platform due to manufacturers and carriers modifying Android to suit their own ends without keeping support or customer satisfaction in mind. In one example, Verizon’s Galaxy S variant in the Fascinate features Android, but defaults all search traffic to Microsoft’s Bing due to a carrier agreement with the software giant, with no option to restore Google’s own Search without rooting.
This has led those same carriers and manufacturers to lodge complaints with the Justice Department arguing that they should still be able to implement Android as needed and that Google is attempting to change the terms of the agreement. For its part, Google has responded by stating that the OHA members agreed to these policies when signing up to support Android and is now implementing those policies after seeing the direction of the platform.
This means that any carrier or manufacturer that wishes to receive the latest Android builds will now have to submit plans directly to Andy Rubin and the rest of the core Android team before receiving access to those builds, in effect closing the platform to Google’s mandates and disallowing previous degrees of carrier and manufacturer customization, which representatives from both say will harm differentiation and lead to near identical devices.
This also follows Google’s recent announcement that it would delay the public release of Android Honeycomb source code and restrict the current version to major hardware manufacturers, also closing out smaller manufacturers and developers from the latest Android build.
I don’t know how this plays into google being an open os but I think in the long run it will be better. Less fragmentation means better and more stable os on the phones and manufacturers that qualify. I myself only use htc phones but it would be good if it was stable all across the board.
I Agree, in the long run it is the right step to take, that is for the consumers and Google, C.P. also sited the Open OS factor some while back, however this had to be done, otherwise the issue would get out of hand and causing serious damage to Android’s growth potential, mind you Honeycomb will most likely become the next stepping stone for the Android phones. Thank You