Source:BC
There is a 72% chance that your smartphone is running Android, and over the past five years, this number has only gone up.
That’s
why today we’ll be exploring one of the most important parts of the Google
empire: Android.
Although
the Android OS became popular after 2010, the story behind it goes way back to 1989.
Not in Silicon Valley, but in the Cayman Islands.
Early one
morning, he stumbled across a man sleeping in a chair outside. As it turns out
one of Apple’s leading software engineers had just been kicked out of his beach
house by his girlfriend. Andy was compassionate and gave the man a place to
stay.
In
return, he was offered a job at Apple, right around the time when the Macintosh
had peaked in popularity.
Thanks to
this lucky break, Andy kicked off a great career in Silicon Valley, first by developing
the Macintosh Quadra for Apple, and
then joining General Magic, the company now famous for developing the
predecessor of the modern smartphone.
While
working at these companies Andy would always develop his own side projects.
They usually involved him building crazy robots, and eventually people around
the office started calling Andy the Android.
Interestingly
enough, one of Andy’s colleagues at General Magic was Tony Fadell, the man who
would later go on to create both the iPod and the iPhone. Although General
Magic’s idea was truly innovative, it was at least a decade ahead of its time,
which is why the company eventually went bust. Andy never gave up on the idea
of the smartphone.
However,
and in 1999 he and his engineering buddies decided to start their own company
to pursue that dream.
What they
eventually developed was the Hiptop,
a phone with a keyboard that could wirelessly connecting to the Internet. While
not innovative from a hardware standpoint, the Hiptop was nevertheless a
pioneer. You see, back in 2002 mobile phones were still considered mostly a
business tool, and nobody had made any serious effort to market them to
teenagers.
The
Hiptop’s design was the perfect blend of instant messaging, Web access and
convenience, but Andy ran into a problem before he could even start production.
Back then the mobile phone industry was almost exclusively controlled by
carrier companies. They were the ultimate gatekeepers for any phone
manufacturer, because without them, phones were basically useless. Carries had
power over nearly every aspect of mobile phones, from how much they would cost
to how they would be marketed.
The
Hiptop seemed like a very risky investment, so Andy struggled getting any
carrier on board. He eventually had to strike an extremely unfavorable deal
with the only company that was even marginally interested, T-Mobile. Not only did they demand a large percentage of all the
sales, they also got to rebrand Andy’s phone, releasing it as the T-Mobile
Sidekick.
It was
somewhat successful, but it was mostly used by urban rich kids so it’s
popularity was limited and Danger Inc didn’t really get any public exposure out
of it.
Nevertheless, the phone did get into the hands
of the right person: Larry Page, the co-founder of Google. Now, back then
Google wasn’t nearly as big as it is today; in fact, it was still behind the
likes of AOL Search and Yahoo. That’s why Larry was pleasantly surprised when
he
discovered that the default search engine for Andy’s phone, was Google. Larry
saw huge potential in the idea of the smartphone and wanted Google to make one
of their own, but he knew that the carriers would never allow an outsider to
steal their profits. Larry felt it was still too early for Google to challenge
the carriers, and so he waited.
As luck
would have it, over the next three years, Andy would develop a new business
model that could finally end the carrier monopoly.
His previous
venture, Danger Inc, was like any regular manufacturer, relying on hardware sales
to make its money.
This came
into direct conflict with carriers, who wanted their clients to use the same
phone for as long as possible to prevent them from switching to competitors.
Andy
figured out a brilliant way of ending this conflict of interest. Instead of
relying on hardware sales, he would give out his software for free, earning
money by taking a percentage of the carrier service fees.
Andy knew
firsthand just how difficult it was to be a developer for phone apps back then,
so he wanted to make his operating system open source as well, giving everyone
the chance to use it and build applications for it. He combined these two ideas
into a new company, which he called Android, in 2004 and while the rest of the
world laughed at his idealism, Google knew that this was what they had been
waiting for.
Just a
year later, when Android still had nothing more than a barely-working demo,
Google
bought
the whole company for $50 million. Even then, Google’s motives were clear: they
anticipated the rise of mobile computing and wanted a dedicated platform
through which to distribute their services.
Andy and
his team were brought along to do just that, and they even got their own
building at the Google plex. Over the next two years they would develop their
revolutionary idea into a fully functional operating system. But that was just
the first step: they still needed to design a phone the OS would run on and to
partner with a carrier to actually sell it. Finding someone to build the phone
was easy enough, but getting a carrier to willingly give up their control of
the phone market was difficult to say the least.
In fact,
every single carrier Google contacted turned them down. Then, on January 9,2007, Apple unveiled the iPhone. Unsurprisingly,
the Android office was in chaos the very next day. While they had experimented
with touchscreen technology, nobody had imagined that Apple would be fully
integrating it into their phone. Over the next nine months, Andy’s team
completely redesigned their product, adding touchscreen functionality on top if
its pre-existing keyboard.
The
release of the iPhone, however, actually helped Android. You see, Apple weren’t
nearly as determined to break up the carrier monopoly Andy was so eager to
destroy. Steve Jobs had just gone with the flow, signing an exclusive deal with
AT&T; to get the iPhone out as fast as possible. But once the other
carriers saw just how popular the iPhone was, they started to panic, fearing
that AT&T; would come to dominate the smartphone market thanks to its
initial lead.
This fear is what eventually convinced T-Mobile
to sell Android’s first phone, the HTC Dream. Unfortunately, it would take
Andy’s team another year before they could finally release it, giving Steve
Jobs plenty of time to grab market share. But Google did not come unprepared.
They used this extra time to form an alliance with various carriers, software
developers and manufacturers.
Apple’s
deal with AT&T; convinced everyone that they had to work together. Steve
Jobs threatened to destroy their entire business models, which made Android’s
open source offer much more lucrative. Because Android wasn’t a closed-off
system like iOS, carriers and manufacturers could remain confident that Google
wouldn’t abuse its power over the Android platform.
Thus, in
November 2007 , the Open Handset
Alliance was born. The crusade against Apple would not be easy, however, and by
mid 2009 iOS already held 40% of the
smartphone market. A big chunk of its market share came from the dying Symbian OS,
which was the operating system of older phones. In the midst of Symbian’s
decline, Android scored its first big victory: the Motorola Droid.
By the
time of its release in 2009, the carriers were so scared of fading into
irrelevance that Verizon personally spend $100 million marketing the Droid as
an iPhone-alternative. From then on, the Android OS quickly reached mass market
adoption. Apple barely made an attempt to stop it because their model of high
prices and exclusivity was the polar opposite of the cheapness and variety of
Android. By May 2010, Android had already surpassed iOS in market share, and by
the end of the year it was the world’s most popular mobile operating system, a
title it still holds to this day. Andy oversaw the first 18 versions of Android
and is likely responsible for the tasty trend of naming the different releases
after popular sweets.
Andy did
eventually leave Google in 2014. Today he runs his own incubator in Silicon
Valley and also has a billion-dollar smartphone
company that just started shipping its first phone, the Essential PH1 ,
that is so far getting
mixed
reviews. Even without Andy, Android remains the dominant mobile operating
system on the planet, despite facing sharp criticism from all sides on a
variety of issues.
Things
like security flaws and malware issues haven’t hindered Android’s popularity.
As of August 2017, Android controls 72.7
% of the mobile phone market, with over 2 billion active users every single month.
Right now
iOS is the only thing that stands between it and monopoly, and Android is
showing no signs of slowing down. In fact, its latest release, 8.0 Oreo, is
Android’s most ambitious one yet.
With an improved
notification system, tighter background process control and a legitimate
solution to its fragmentation issue, so far Oreo is being praised all around.
At this
point, Android can no longer be called just a mobile operating system.
Besides
phones and tablets, Oreo will also be integrated in cars, watches, TVs, VR
headsets and possibly numerous other devices thanks to a version dedicated to
the “Internet of Things”.
Suffice
to say, things are looking bright for Android, and considering just how crucial
of a part they are in the Google war machine, they’ll likely remain on top for
a long time.
Now, the
technical innovations that made Android possible back in the early 2000s aren’t
things
that are easy to learn.
Thanks for reading this article.
Thanks for reading this article.
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