An Android™ phone is a cellphone that uses the Google-developed  Android™ operating system and platform. Google partnered with the High  Tech Computer Corporation (HTCC) to build hardware for the G1 cellphone,  the first mobile phone to run the Android™ platform. In 2008, T-Mobile  premiered the G1 Android™ phone to the public.
On the technical side, an Android™ phone runs on the Android™ operating  system, key applications and middleware. It's Linux kernel-based, has  applications that are written in the Java language and can even run  applications written in the C language. It is also a product, partly, of  the Open Handset Alliance, which encourages the use and advancement  of open source software for cellphones.
One of the biggest differences between a phone running the Android™  platform and others is that the software Android™ uses is a complex  operating system. In contrast, the majority of operational cellphones  run primitive real time applications.
In regard to its Internet capabilities, the Android™ phone uses WebKit  to power the G1's Chrome Lite browser. Because WebKit also  powers iPhone's Safari, the G1 is a competitor to the iPhone in terms of  users' enhanced web experiences.
An Android™ phone can also run multiple applications at the same time  and in the background of a phone, making multitasking easier and the  functionality of the phone more fluid than other cellphones.



 






 
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