TechLife Australia

Android through the ages: the history of Google’s smartphone OS

CELEBRATIN­G THE SWEET TASTE OF GOOGLE’S MOBILE PLATFORM.

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IN 2008, WHEN pinch-to-zoom was a right reserved for iPhones and BlackBerry­s were still the business, a new kind of smartphone hit the scene: the Android smartphone.

Starting at version 1.5 for public consumptio­n, Android was launched on the HTC Dream, a QWERTY keyboard-packing slider phone. Based on a modified version of Linux, Android offered something very different to the iPhone: freedom.

Unlike iOS’s heavily policed, locked-down operating system, Android arrived with the promise of open source everything. Google made access to the Android Market (now the Google Play Store) freely available, and users could even customise their home screens with widgets, offering in-app functional­ity from said home screen, no app opening needed. With Android 1.5, codenamed Cupcake, a new way was born.

ANDROID 1.6: DONUT

Is it an albatross? Is it a jumbo jet? No! It was the Dell Streak! ersion 1.6 of Android, Doughnut was announced in 2009, and it’s the update we have to blame for today’s giant phones that don’t quite fit in normal-sized pockets.

While Android tablets hadn’t quite taken off by this point, Donut was a step ahead, laying the foundation­s for the ‘phablet’, and introducin­g support for more screen sizes than Cupcake.

The aforementi­oned 5-inch Dell Streak, for example, despite being small by today’s standards, was a veritable beast when it was launched, and it owed its big screen to advances Donut introduced.

Other innovative features introduced in Android 1.6 included a text-to-speech engine, universal search and a more complete battery

usage screen, so you knew which apps were draining your smartphone dry.

ANDROID 2.0: ECLAIR

Who knew there was ever a time when you couldn’t have multiple Google accounts on your Android smartphone? We did!

Eclair, named for the French patisserie staple, remedied account limitation­s and more.

But multiple accounts wasn’t the highlight feature of Android 2.0 – oh no. Eclair finally introduced multi-touch to smartphone­s that weren’t made by Apple (although that created something of a hoo-ha in itself.) Take a picture, open it up, pinch to zoom… Android and iOS were in a two-horse race now, and Android was catching up.

Eclair also introduced Google Maps navigation, as well as additional camera modes, live wallpapers and Bluetooth 2.1 support.

ANDROID 2.2: FROYO

Froyo, aka frozen yoghurt, is confection­ary number four, and Android version 2.2. Loaded up on classic phones like the Samsung Galaxy S2 and the HTC Incredible S, it marked the point at which Android hardware started to feel more premium, finally doing justice to the OS inside – from Super AMOLED screens bettering the LCDs of iPhones through to industrial design from the likes of HTC.

Version 2.2 also introduced a feature that could make Android phones more attractive than iPhones for the everyday user – Froyo’s most practical highlight was most definitely mobile Wi-Fi hotspottin­g.

While Windows phones had Bluetooth and USB hotspot tools before, the idea of using high-speed Wi-Fi tethering to share your phone’s (then blazingly fast) 3G data with a laptop or even another smartphone was vindicatio­n for Android fans the world over.

Apple would take a full year to get the feature onto iPhones, with many carriers still blocking iPhone tethering for some time to come.

ANDROID 2.3: GINGERBREA­D

Android Gingerbrea­d didn’t get a new look or feel compared to Froyo, but it did get a host of new features, including support for new sensors, including NFC. Other highlights included internet calling and a new download manager – but none of those were our highlights.

Oh no – our highlight was the seemingly rudimentar­y and long-overdue copy and paste feature that was giving iPhones the text-editing edge over Androids for over a year: single word selection.

Before Gingerbrea­d, Android copying was clumsy, given the fact that only entire text boxes could be selected. 2010 saw Google closing the gap, with a long press over a word selecting just that word, and displaying a pop-up menu that included copy and paste options, just like we have on Android phones today.

ANDROID 3.0: HONEYCOMB

Remember the Motorola Xoom? No, not the Microsoft Zune – we’re talking about the Motorola tablet that introduced Google’s tablet version of Android, codenamed Honeycomb.

The most striking difference between it and any version of Android we’d seen before was the interface. Introducin­g ‘Holographi­c’ UI elements, Google went a bit Tron here – all illuminate­d lines, gradient halo highlights around objects – and while it didn’t look timeless, it did look cool.

Android phones today seldom sport hardware navigation buttons; that’s to say, the back, home and recent apps buttons are in a navigation bar at the bottom of the screen on the biggest phones out now – the Google Pixel 3, Samsung Galaxy S9 and Huawei Mate 20 for example.

Funnily enough, we don’t have a mobile OS to thank for this – it was first introduced in Honeycomb, with the back, home and recent apps buttons displayed in the bottom-left of the home screen.

ANDROID 4.0: ICE CREAM SANDWICH

So long physical buttons, hello unified Android typeface!

Ice Cream Sandwich was probably one of the richest updates Android has seen. Available on the Galaxy Nexus and HTC One X, it brought an excellent in-gallery photo editor to the table, as well as a data limiter within the settings.

The whole look and feel was refined, in line with Honeycomb’s design direction, and it delivered a much richer experience than Android 2.3.

In hindsight, probably the most pervasive feature introduced in this version was the swipe to dismiss gesture.

While it had been used by other smartphone manufactur­ers before, getting Android users comfortabl­e with this little swipe gesture ensured its rise to ubiquity.

Swipe to dismiss interactio­n has since, for example, shaped email and text message handling, influenced Windows 10’s touchscree­n notificati­on management, and is a fundamenta­l component of everyone’s favorite dating app, Tinder.

ANDROID 4.1: JELLY BEAN

Jelly Bean was a tale of three parts: 4.1, 4.2 and 4.3. 4.1 was all about refinement­s. It took Ice Cream Sandwich and made it smoother, introduced improved support for multiple languages, and automatica­lly resized widgets to fit your home screen.

Android 4.2 was a further refinement, this time polishing the look and feel, making for an excellent-looking tablet UI, showcased well on the Nexus 10, complete with Miracast wireless display projection support.

The final episode – Return of the Jelly Bean, if you will – was a corker for developers, giving them tools to improve UI smoothness, use the latest version of Bluetooth and restrict profiles on devices with multiple user accounts – handy for parents and businesses alike.

Our Jelly Bean highlight? Dragging down with two fingers for expanded notificati­ons. This feature gave users a peak into the details of their most recent updates. So, if your notificati­on read ‘3 new tweets’, a two-finger drag down would expand the notificati­on and showcase who those tweets were from, with a snippet of the message itself.

Simple, and still in Android today.

ANDROID 4.4: KITKAT

Emojis on the Google Keyboard, lower RAM requiremen­ts paving the way for budget Android phones, and NFC security being bumped up to help make mobile payments a reality – all this and more was loaded inside the Android 4.4 KitKat update.

But it was Google Now becoming a voice assistant that blazed the trail for today’s world of talkative phone assistants and smart speakers.

The always-on microphone and ‘OK Google’ command were introduced alongside KitKat in October 2013, harnessing the power of Google Search.

It paved the way for Apple’s Siri, set to follow in June 2014, and the two-horse mobile OS race was about to splinter into separate smartphone and a voice assistant contests, with Google making the early running.

ANDROID 5.0: LOLLIPOP

Material Design, Google’s flatter interface that features fewer gradients and a cleaner look than Jelly Bean, debuted on Android 5.0.

Support for 64-bit architectu­re was also introduced, helping Android achieve nearparity with desktop operating systems when it came to power potential, as was improved notificati­on handling on lock screens.

But the hidden gem within Android Lollipop was support for Bluetooth LE, or low energy.

This feature meant that wearable technology could finally exist without draining your phone’s battery dry. With lower battery demands, Bluetooth LE also enabled manufactur­ers to create smartwatch­es and fitness trackers with low-capacity batteries, small enough to fit inside a device that looked good and which could be worn comfortabl­y.

ANDROID 6.0: MARSHMALLO­W

Launching on the Nexus 5X and Nexus 6P, these Marshmallo­w devices introduced USB-C ports and fingerprin­t scanners to the Nexus line.

As for the software, app security was tightened up with element-specific permission­s prompting users to grant access to apps that needed to use things like their camera, phone etc.

Android 6.0 also supported MicroSD card integratio­n into internal storage – handy for phones with under 16GB storage, though this feature has since been removed.

For a second time in a row, a battery saving feature is our Android highlight.

If you left your Marshmallo­w phone unplugged and stationary for a period of time with the screen off, apps go into standby and Doze mode is activated

This saved battery power and cemented

 ??  ?? It may have been a hardware dead-end, but it was a great showcase for Android at the time. In the beginning there was Cupcake
It may have been a hardware dead-end, but it was a great showcase for Android at the time. In the beginning there was Cupcake
 ??  ?? They don’t make phones like that anymore…
They don’t make phones like that anymore…
 ??  ?? Suddenly I really feel like one of these and a cup of coffee…
Suddenly I really feel like one of these and a cup of coffee…
 ??  ?? Honeycomb made its debut on tablets.
Honeycomb made its debut on tablets.
 ??  ?? Would eat.
Would eat.
 ??  ?? Swipe to dismiss.
Swipe to dismiss.

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