Google For iPhone: Android’s Beta-Test?

Google Blogoscoped has what I take to be a very insightful look into Google's recent gains on the iPhone:

I’ve been surprised by Google’s rapid redesign of its mobile services to support the iPhone: In less than 6 months, Google has created custom iPhone interfaces for all its key services. But it may have an ulterior motive.

Google are gaining considerable experience developing its mobile services for its new platform – Android. But look a little closer. The iPhone and Android share the common foundations in the open source browser WebKit –

"WebKit is also the name of the Mac OS X system framework version of the engine that’s used by Safari, Dashboard, Mail, and many other OS X applications. WebKit’s HTML and JavaScript code began as a branch of the KHTML and KJS libraries from KDE."

And on Google’s Android website:

"[Android’s] integrated browser based on the open source WebKit engine."

Hence, what we may be actually looking at is Google’s mobile services which will be available on Android from its launch, effectively putting iPhone users through the pain of finding the flaws.

This is almost certainly the case. Really interesting.

Discuss this Article 2

DRWAM
on Dec 21, 2007
Paul, you sure are making me eat me words against 'the cloud'. There is an iPhone [web based] version/service for looking up drugs at ePocrates. However, The full version for Windows CE or Mobile as well as the Palm version has been out for years. There is Mobile PDR for both platforms, but not for the iPhone of course. Perhaps the mobile computing market may be best served with these services. That would reserve memory for other things such as documents, music and videos. But, phones do not get signal through heavily leaded areas as well as other places in radiology offices and hospital. Fortunately, WiFi is available inside the hospital and is getting started at other institutions, to improve reception. While the iPhone is a contender, most medical apps are Windows based, clearly giving Windows mobile the advantage in the medical field. Palm apps are numerous too, and both have some fantastic software that really helps us from patient care [including prescription writing], to data/demographic collection and even billing. That's a lot of catch up for the iPhone, but the cloud could make it possible. Dang, I really hate being wrong [as many of you know]. Thanks, Doc
RunTimeError
on Dec 26, 2007
Paul. Dude. Fix your blog. Sifting through this pingback crap is annoying.

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