Earlier this week on Monday, Google’s Android OS turned five and what it has achieved in that remarkably short amount of time is really unbelievable: 1 billion activations, a market share of 70% and 50 billion+ app downloads.
That’s a lot considering that half a decade ago, no one had heard about it.
Well it all started on 23rd September 2008, when Google, HTC and T-Mobile teamed up to announced the T-Mobile G1 (international name HTC Dream), world’s first smartphone running on Android.
It ran on Android 1.0, which is a far cry from today’s 4.3 Jelly Bean, had no multi-touch, and to the annoyance of the Apple cult, a slide-out physical QWERTY keyboard, maybe there to appeal to BlackBerry fans. Still, it did what it was most supposed to do, sow the seed which is a lush, flourishing tree now.
Catching Success
By version 2.1 Eclairs, Android had improved drastically and was almost getting into iPhone’s levels. It was then in the first part of 2010 that the OS finally started to look on iPhone-levelling benchmarks.
Early 2010 saw the first Google phone, the Nexus One which ran on Android 2.3 Eclair. The HTC equivalent, HTC Desire also fared fairly well. But it was not until June, when Samsung pulled the covers off the Galaxy S smartphone that the OS finally started to catch fire.
Among achievements was being declared the 2nd best gadget of 2010 by none other by Time (who had given the #1 honours to the iPhone in the past), who also called 2010 the year of the Android. The iPhone 4 could only manage 6th position.
By late 2010, the OS had taken the top ranks in global market share from Symbian, other than being updated to Froyo and Gingerbread.
Gingerbread marked a huge moment in Android. Bringing notable improvements in usability, it took over the entire market. One drawback was that, since it was used by so many companies on virtually uncountable number of phones from all categories, it still stubbornly accounts for 30% of all Androids.
The next major step was taken in the version Ice Cream Sandwich when onscreen keys were added for the first time. It also marks the first major visual change since Eclair. Later on, Jelly Bean was announced. Jelly Bean is the current Gingerbread, popularizing the OS to unmatched levels.
After Gingerbread, the OS never looked backwards. While Apple’s devices remain almost unmatched in terms of individual sales against competing devices, Android phones and tablets have always sold better when under the common OS flag, thanks to more than 11,000 different devices.
And it’s not limited to the smartphones and tablet industries only. From computers and televisions to game consoles, Android is conquering markets in a way no competitor has never done before.
Timeline
And finally, a rather incomplete (for the history so far is so immensely rich) timeline detailing the important events in Android’s life till now:
- September 2008: HTC and Google unveil the HTC Dream/T-Mobile G1
- April 2009: Google unveils Android 1.5 Cupcake, the first notable OS version
- April 2009: Samsung takes out the Galaxy i7500, its first notable Android flagship
- September 2009: Android version 1.6 Donut is released
- October 2009: Android 2.0 Eclair, a notable update is released
- February 2010: HTC Desire is released
- March 2010: The first Google phone, the Nexus One is released
- May 2010: Android 2.2 Froyo is released
- June 2010: The Samsung Galaxy S, first wildly popular Android phone is released
- December 2010: Android 2.3 Gingerbread, the most important OS version is released
- December 2010: The second Google phone, Nexus S comes out
- February 2011: The ill-fated Android 3.0 Honeycomb is released
- April 2011: Successor the original Galaxy S, the Galaxy SII is released
- October 2011: Biggest update since Eclairs, Ice Cream Sandwich is released, making Android look more mature
- November 2011: The second Samsung-made Google phone, Galaxy Nexus is released
- April 2012: The HTC One X is released
- May 2012: The Galaxy SIII comes out
- June 2012: The highly anticipated Android Jelly Bean update arrives
- November 2012: The Google Nexus 4 is released
- November 2012: The first Google-certified 10-inch tablet, the Nexus 10 comes out
- March 2013: The HTC One is outed
- April 2013: The fourth Galaxy S flagship, the Galaxy S4 is released
- July 2013: Last major Android update, Android 4.3 is rolled out
- July 2013: Second-generation Nexus 7 is released
- October 2013: Android KitKat will be released
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