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Android narrowly trails iPhone in open source app race

Android narrowly trails iPhone in open source app race By:  Rafael Ruffolo On: 25 Feb 2009 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

A new report from Black Duck Software finds that while Google’s Android platform is flying under the radar for most mainstream smart phone users, developers are certainly answering the search giant’s call to arms



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Despite launching on the T-Mobile G1 with little mainstream fanfare, Google Inc.’s Android OS appears to have gained strong interest in the open source development community, according to a new report by Black Duck Software Inc.

The Waltham, Mass.-based open source software consultancy found that Apple Inc.’s iPhone led the industry with 266 open source project releases during 2008, while Android followed in second place with 191 releases. Black Duck compiled the data after scouring through over 185,000 of open source projects across 4,000 Internet sites.

“From the standpoint of relative size, I would have actually expected the iPhone’s lead to have been even larger,” said Rob Enderle, principal analyst at San Jose, Calif.-based The Enderle Group. “People typically want to build for something that is in-market and with Android we only have the G1, which is kind of a beta release and not a very attractive phone.”

“It was by no means the sparkling product that the iPhone was when it launched.”

Peter Vescuso, executive vice-president of marketing and business development at Black Duck Software, said that he encountered a lot of buzz surrounding the Android platform while attending this month’s GMSA Mobile World Congress show in Barcelona.

“Android was very, very hot at the show with everybody talking about it,” Vescuso said. “The interesting thing here is that the Android platform has only been out since October. So we’re seeing a larger number of open source projects given that the platform was only officially released a few months ago.”

Rounding out the top five in Black Duck’s report were Windows Mobile at 174 project releases, Palm Inc. with 113 projects, and Research In Motion Ltd.’s BlackBerry OS with 96 releases.

While Windows Mobile is certainly a closed platform that wouldn’t necessarily be associated with open source, Vescuso said, the company enjoys four times the market share than the iPhone does. As for Palm, he added, while the company has certainly lost some momentum in recent years, its future open source community acceptance relies on what kind of splash its new Palm Pre can make on the market.


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Rafael Ruffolo Rafael Ruffolo joined ComputerWorld as a staff writer in June 2007 and was the winner of a Kenneth R. Wilson award for business journalism. He is interested in government IT, copyright, virt... more

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Comments (2)

The G1 is not ugly
2/26/2009 12:00:00 AMIt's nice looking, has all relevant hardware (e.g. HSDPA, keyboard), and an open software stack. (And before anybody tells me how cool a touch screen is, guys have you tried to operate an onscreen keyboard blindly => hint: tactile feedback is rather relevant, IMHO)
This article is meaningless
2/27/2009 12:00:00 AMThere's no correlation or causality between the number of open source projects this company could tally that are related to a platform, and how popular or successful the platform will be to developers or end users. Further, there's no explanation of the type, scale, or function of these individual open source projects. Beware industry analysts who publish findings based on nebulous, (apples != apples) comparisons. It's too fuzzy and carries an undertone of agenda.
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