The Android army includes a few secret agents. We're
talking classy spies here -- think 007, resplendent in a
classy dinner jacket with a shaken martini close at hand.
The newest ally on the
Google (Nasdaq: GOOG) side of the smartphone
street is Sony Ericsson, the
money-losinghandset venture between
LM Ericsson (Nasdaq: ERIC) and
Sony (NYSE: SNE). Sony Ericsson is launching
the Xperia X10 Android phone, a smartly appointed potential
rival to high-end phones like the Droid and the
Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) iPhone.
The X10 is presented as the flagship model of a coming
line of new Sony Ericsson phones. Hitting store shelves in
the first half of 2010, it comes with a full-featured
8-megapixel camera, a
4-inch OLED touchscreen, a high-powered
Qualcomm (Nasdaq: QCOM)
Snapdragon processor, and designer-kissed curves. The X10
runs Sony Ericsson's own UX user interface
– a platform that allows for robust social
networking and more robust media browsing -- on top of the
Android operating system. Plus, the phone is offered in a
color scheme that Sony Ericsson describes as
“Sensuous Black.†How
svelte.
You wouldn't know it was an Android without a magnifying
glass, though. The press release presents it as "the Open
OS," and the Android moniker shows up only three times, in
the technical fact sheet and in an offhand mention of the
Android application store.
That's different from the
Verizon (NYSE: VZ) Wireless and
Motorola (NYSE: MOT)
Droidand a plethora of other Androids, because most
gadget builders like to trumpet their choice of operating
system from the rooftops. Still, I strongly suspect that Sony
Ericsson's strategy is A-OK with Google.
Go ahead and hide the standard Android interface behind a
snazzy new digital experience. You wouldn't really expect a
Sony-branded phone to look and feel exactly like a Motorola
gadget, would you? And as long as users can connect to the
Android store and install applications that were designed for
the Android, well, who cares if there isn't a massive Android
logo on the phone, Google stickers on the box, and so
forth?
Google isn't backing the Android platform to push the
Android brand. It's all about
placing fancy phones capable of browsing the Web on every
belt. Whether the phone you're using happens to be an
Android, an iPhone, or any other smartphone, you will
probably end up Googling around a bit. When the market for
Internet traffic grows, Google wins. The Android is just a
means to that end.
Time will tell whether Sony Ericsson's
strategy of unleashing a wave of Android phones will further
its own goals as well. Much like Motorola and other handset
makers without a strong software platform, Sony Ericsson can
utilize the Android OS as a means to catch up with
competitors such as Apple. However, with a glut of
Android-powered phones being announced,
we'll have to wait and see whether Sony
Ericsson's styling and UX interface are
enough to separate it from the pack.
Do you dig Sony Ericsson's new phone?
Drop a note in the comments box below and let us know what
phone you're planning on buying next.
This article was originally published as
Android: Shaken or Stirred?on
Fool.com
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