Well it looks like we won’t be seeing a second Android mobile phone anytime soon. Kogan Technologies, the company poised to introduce the second commercially available Android-base mobile phone, has just announced that it will be delaying the delivery of the Agora and Agora Pro mobile phones indefinitely.
A new mobile application that enables easy diagnosis of patients in remote areas has been developed to run on Android. The software called Moca integrates the Android based medical diagnosis application with the open source OpenMRS medical records database system.
A private group of developers called “cupcake” is poised to merge into the next release of Google Android a bunch of fixes, changes and enhancements. Google is in the process of merging the private branch into mainstream that will take the changes into the public mainstream. I’m particularly happy to hear that video capture and A2DP bluetooth will now be available.
The source code to the Android operating system has now been released to the public. We can now truly call Android as the first truly open mobile platform.
Just came across this and I’m really curious as to what is being offered, visited their site but no contact info. Some information on their site indicates that the analytics service is free and provides J2ME, iPhone and Android developers a way to improve their applications and earn more revenue.
Look’s like Gameloft, the leading developer for mobile games, is supporting the Android open mobile platform. Gameloft has announced that it has plans on creating 10 plus games for Android. Bubble Bash will be the first title scheduled for launch in Q1 2009.
Our new T-Mobile G1 toy will not be complete if we won’t be able to hack it using the latest SDK. So just in sync with the just release T-Mobile G1 mobile phone, Google has released version 1.0 of the Android SDK. You can get it from the Android download page. Even though, I haven’t got a T-Mobile G1, I’m downloading the SDK right now.
Just read some leaked info of the very, very soon to be released T-Mobile G1 Android-based mobile phone. Looks like it will have a 3.1 megapixel camera but no video capture. No stereo bluetooth either. Supports only 65K colors on a 480×320 screen. No corporate email and gmail is required. You can read more at the TmoNews post.
With just moments away from the launch of the very first mobile phone to use Android open mobile platform, the T-mobile web site to launch the HTC Dream based mobile phone of T-mobile is already up and running.
I’m a bit eager in waiting for the first Android mobile phone to come out. I’ve been reading that it’s coming out on the last week of September or early October.








