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Is Android Google’s weapon against Microsoft?

Is Android Google’s weapon against Microsoft?

By:  Rafael Ruffolo  On: 25 Aug 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

Is Google’s open source handheld OS progressing as smoothly as the search engine giant hoped? And when will enterprises take notice?

Google Inc.’s Android project could be the start of a much larger enterprise strategy, according to one industry analyst. But before the search engine giant can threaten Microsoft’s enterprise supremacy, most wireless observers agree that the company’s open source OS platform will need to regain support from its development community.

With the first Android-based phone – the HTC Dream – rumoured to be joining the crowded smartphone market later this year, whether or not enterprise users will take notice remains to be seen. But according to Rob Enderle, principal analyst at The Enderle Group, big business is exactly the target Google hopes to attract.

“The Android platform is part of Google’s strategy to eventually move against Microsoft in the enterprise,” Enderle said. “Google is coming in with the phone because it’s not a platform that Microsoft currently controls and no vendor has reached a monopoly in the mobile space yet.”

Enderle said the smartphone is trending to be the next laptop computer and an integral part of enterprise communication. “Just like Microsoft rode the change from the mainframe to the PC into the enterprise, Google will look to do the same with the smartphone,” he added.

But other mobile industry watchers, like Gartner analyst Ken Dulaney, disagreed with Enderle’s theory that the Mountain View, Calif.-based tech giant has its sights focused on large organizations.

“Google really needs to focus on the consumer first and we have said publicly that we do not believe Android will be an enterprise candidate,” Dulaney said. “If one of the developers or operators wanted to create an open source profile that’s attractive to the enterprise, however, Google would say ‘go for it.’”

Enderle agreed that Google and its partners will initially target the consumer market with its first batch of handhelds. But, he added, the company will look to create enterprise buzz by following the blueprint set out by RIM and Apple – which had its devices carried into the enterprise by board members and top-level executives.

“With the economic times being hard, it’s difficult to believe that enterprises will be jumping in and buying everybody new phones,” he said. “So, the path that Apple and Google are on, for the most part, is a good one. Go after the consumer market first, and then alter the capability of the phone so it can address enterprise needs.”


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Rafael Ruffolo Rafael Ruffolo was a senior writer for ComputerWorld Canada from 2006 to 2011. He was the winner of a Kenneth R. Wilson award for business journalism in 2009.

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