androidlogo1112.pngThe Google-led Open Handset Alliance, the industry consortium developing an open-source mobile developer platform called Android, is now providing developers with an early look at its software development kit (or SDK).

And to spur development, Google is also creating a $10 million fund for promising new applications built for Android.

The hope is that developers will build mobile applications that make the platform more compelling to consumers and to the many large handset manufacturers, carriers and mobile software companies that are not participating in the alliance. Our previous coverage here.

The kit will support a touchscreen, a webkit-based browser, threaded text messaging, 3G connections, 3D graphics and a variety of file formats, including MPEG-4, h.264, MP3 and AAC.

Last week, Google announced the Open Handset Alliance to create a Linux-based Android platform with a group of more 34 mobile partners.

We’ve already written about one startup that appears to work with Android, a mobile local search company in stealth, called Whatsopen.com.

Tags: ,
Trackback URL

  1. VentureBeat » CallFreq: An Android application that’s more ready than Android said:

    [...] applications, talking about how they imagined Android’s software development kit (SDK; our coverage) to be more [...]

  2. VentureBeat » Deal fever: Fraud Sciences, Trolltech, E-Dialog, Anywhere.fm all acquired said:

    [...] – Nokia also paid cash for Trolltech, which was a publicly-listed company on the Oslo Stock Exchange, but also had investors including Index Ventures. Simply put, Trolltech’s application development framework, called Qt, makes it much easier for developers to build applications that work across both PCs and mobile phones, as well as on the web. That sets Nokia up nicely to compete with Google’s Android, which we’ve covered here. [...]