Neil Marr
Member since: Oct 5th, 2006
Neil Marr's Latest Comments
Blog Activity
| Blog | # of Comments |
|---|---|
| Joystiq | 2 Comments |
| Engadget | 7 Comments |
| Engadget HD | 1 Comment |
| Joystiq Xbox | 2 Comments |


Engadget wins the People's Voice Webby in Consumer Electronics, and you can win a Droid Incredible!
May 4th 2010 4:41PM (Engadget)Engadget's recession antidote: win an insane grab bag of random stuff!
Jun 22nd 2009 12:17PM (Engadget)Engadget's recession antidote: win a Sonos Multi-Room Music System Bundle 150
Apr 29th 2009 12:04PM (Engadget)Netflix raising rates for Blu-ray subscribers by around 20 percent
Mar 30th 2009 2:15PM (Engadget)Rumor: Microsoft motion controller code-named 'Newton'
Apr 9th 2008 12:22PM (Joystiq)Fanswag: win a custom Mass Effect Xbox 360 Elite [update]
Mar 17th 2008 3:59PM (Joystiq Xbox)CES 2008 ultimate swag bag giveaway: like a Xmas stocking in January
Jan 11th 2008 2:25PM (Engadget)Verizon's Venus and Voyager available for pre-order
Nov 8th 2007 10:52AM (Engadget)Live coverage of Google's Android Gphone mobile OS announcement
Nov 5th 2007 11:56AM (Engadget)Posted by Andy Rubin, Director of Mobile Platforms
Despite all of the very interesting speculation over the last few months, we're not announcing a Gphone. However, we think what we are announcing -- the Open Handset Alliance and Android -- is more significant and ambitious than a single phone. In fact, through the joint efforts of the members of the Open Handset Alliance, we hope Android will be the foundation for many new phones and will create an entirely new mobile experience for users, with new applications and new capabilities we can’t imagine today.
Android is the first truly open and comprehensive platform for mobile devices. It includes an operating system, user-interface and applications -- all of the software to run a mobile phone, but without the proprietary obstacles that have hindered mobile innovation. We have developed Android in cooperation with the Open Handset Alliance, which consists of more than 30 technology and mobile leaders including Motorola, Qualcomm, HTC and T-Mobile. Through deep partnerships with carriers, device manufacturers, developers, and others, we hope to enable an open ecosystem for the mobile world by creating a standard, open mobile software platform. We think the result will ultimately be a better and faster pace for innovation that will give mobile customers unforeseen applications and capabilities.
We see Android as an important part of our strategy of furthering Google's goal of providing access to information to users wherever they are. We recognize that many among the multitude of mobile users around the world do not and may never have an Android-based phone. Our goals must be independent of device or even platform. For this reason, Android will complement, but not replace, our longstanding mobile strategy of developing useful and compelling mobile services and driving adoption of these products through partnerships with handset manufacturers and mobile operators around the world.
It's important to recognize that the Open Handset Alliance and Android have the potential to be major changes from the status quo -- one which will take patience and much investment by the various players before you'll see the first benefits. But we feel the potential gains for mobile customers around the world are worth the effort. If you’re a developer and this approach sounds exciting, give us a week or so and we’ll have an SDK available. If you’re a mobile user, you’ll have to wait a little longer, but some of our partners are targeting the second half of 2008 to ship phones based on the Android platform. And if you already have a phone you know and love, check out mobile.google.com and make sure you have Google Maps for mobile, Gmail and our other great applications on your phone. We'll continue to make these services better and add plenty of exciting new features, applications and services, too.
Reminder: win the ultimate Halo 3 setup from X3F
Sep 17th 2007 2:40PM (Joystiq)