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2011年5月16日星期一

Arduino Now Acts As An Android Open Accessory “kit” For Google

Arduino Now Acts As An Android Open Accessory “kit” For Google


Android,a brand which always goes beyond the mobile phone.Now Google picks Arduino for Android Open Accessory “kit”.
A USB micro-controller board that is based on the Arduino Mega2560 and Circuits@HomeUSB Host Shield designs (now referred to as the ADK board), which you will later implement as an Android USB accessory. The ADK board provides input and output pins that you can implement through the use of attachments called “shields.” Custom firmware, written in C++, is installed on the board to define the board’s functionality and interaction with the attached shield and Android-powered device. The hardware design files for the board are located in hardware/ directory.
This is the Arduino board for Android OS (2.3.4 or later) to connect I/O. This item is the same model which is devlivered by Google in USB session of Google I/O 2011. All software are working with this boards set. http://a.android.com/demokit Contents in box RT-ADK 1 RT-ADS 1 microUSB cables 2 Please download software from above URL. RT-ADK、RT-ADS main feature CPU: AVR Base mode: Arduino with USB host function.

2011年5月9日星期一

The Value Of The Brand -Apple,Ahead Of Google

The Value Of The Brand -Apple,Ahead Of Google


Have you considered the guestion of the famous brand-Apple?Or have you ever considered the value of the search tool- google?Have you ever compared of these two things?
If you’d asked the guys behind the BrandZ survey at any point over the last four years, they’d have told you “Google,” but in 2011 their answer has changed. Apple is now the hottest property in terms of consumer goodwill, earning an estimated valuation of $153.3 billion and leading a pack that includes the likes of Coca-Cola, BMW, HSBC, and Disney. The tech sector had a very strong year as a whole, with Facebook’s brand improving in value by a staggering 246 percent (to $19.1b) and Amazon becoming the world’s most valuable retailer (at $37.6b) in spite of having no actual stores. Sadly, there were some downers too, as Nintendo lost 37 percent of its brand worth over the past year, Nokia dropped by 28 percent, and the BlackBerry marque was considered 20 percent less awesome than before. Punch the source link to learn more.

A Chat Between Google And AIM,You May Be Interested In

A Chat Between Google And AIM,You May Be Interested In

As is known to us,AOL Instant Messenger and Google Talk have been divided .
AIM debuted among American Online employees in 1995; Google Talk premiered just a decade later. By 2007 you could combine your buddy lists, but that required also logging in twice. Children wept; women gnashed their teeth and rent their garments. Men tried to remain stoic, but inside their hearts were breaking.
But now our long global nightmare has come to an end, and as AOL says “in the next few days” users of both services will be able to chat without logging in twice. One login to rule them all is the promise, though there’s little explanation of just how this will work — presumably something involving hobbits. Hit the source link to catch a glimpse of our harmonious, united-chat future.
If you are interested in it,you can buy a book,magazine,or even search for it.

2011年3月15日星期二

Google said to be preparing NFC checkout trials for San Francisco and New York City Now

Google does not sell hardware, Eric Schmidt told us as much, but the company has few qualms about buying the stuff up. Bloomberg is reporting, on the authority of a pair of well informed sources, that the Mountain View team is about to buy up "thousands" of VeriFone's NFC payment terminals, with a view to installing them in stores across San Francisco and New York City. Those two technophile cities represent the most receptive audience NFC is likely to get in the US, and Google will be hoping that users there will be able to appreciate the convenience of being able to swipe their Nexus S (or other similarly equipped handset) to complete payments. We already know that Schmidt and co. consider the concept of "mobile money" a priority and there have been rumblings of Google setting up its own payment system, which together make this hookup with VeriFone appear highly credible. Bloomberg expects the trials to commence within the next four months, just in time to make iPhone 5 users green with envy.

Google’s AdMob Now Ready To Serve Ads To Windows Phone 7 App Developers

Microsoft’s Windows Phone 7 is getting a vote of confidence from a company not usually counted among its allies.
Google’s AdMob mobile advertising division is ready to introduce a software development kit that will let mobile application developers put AdMob ads in applications designed for Windows Phone 7 for the first time, the company plans to announce Tuesday. AdMob also plans to take the wraps off new SDKs for Apple’s iOS and Google’s Android developers that brings their ads closer to HTML5 compliance, said 
Mark Schaaf, engineering director for AdMob and one of the company’s earliest employees.
T Mobile Windows Phone 7
Mobile advertising is still pretty small compared to Google’s desktop-Web advertising juggernaut, but it’s a more and more attractive way for mobile developers to make money on their games and news applications without having to charge for the app. AdMob has been serving Apple (NSDQ: AAPL) and Android developers for years now, but started to receive more and more requests from those developers for Windows Phone 7 support, since many of the larger developers want to get their apps onto as many platforms as possible, Schaaf said. Microsoft’s new partnership with Nokia also stands to open up those developers to a host of new devices, although the details of that plan will take some time to unfold.
AdMob also supports WebOS applications, and with the move to support Windows Phone 7 that leaves RIM’s BlackBerry software as the lone holdout among the major mobile operating system companies. Despite the fact that BlackBerry remains one of the most popular operating systems in the U.S., Admob hasn’t gotten the same level of demand from its customers for BlackBerry support as it has other platforms, Schaaf said.
“We’ve talked a lot about BlackBerry,” he said. “We’ve had some projects we’ve started on the blackberry side, and will (provide support) if it starts to make sense for our developers.”
Schaaf said the HTML5 enhancements could allow advertisers and mobile developesr to incorporate richer ads into their apps, such as, for example, an ad for a gas station that integrates with a phone’s compass to point the way toward the closest station.

2011年3月10日星期四

House now burning down? Do A Google Search.

There’s nothing quite like being in an emergency situation and not knowing exactly which number to call. I know — I’ve been there recently, and it was terrifying and mind-opening. In a world filled with smartphones capable of holding 80 billion numbers and where any restaurant’s phone number is a Googling away, gone are the days where every house has emergency numbers on the fridge and a copy of the Yellow Pages in the pantry.
Google’s realized this (probably from the spike in searches for “OH GOD MY HOUSE IS ON FIRE”), and has taken steps to shave a few precious seconds off the emergency-number-getting process. When you search for emergency terms (like “poison control”, or “police department”) on Google from your mobile, it’ll now spit out a Click-To-Call phone number as the first result. If your handset’s browser has GPS functionality, it’ll even localize the number automatically (that’s great for if you’re traveling and don’t know the local equivalent to 911.)
Just don’t Click-to-call accidentally. As it turns out, the poison control ladies don’t like when you call just to say “Hi!”

2011年3月8日星期二

Microsoft's Ventura could be a cloud music / video platform, having something to do with Zune

Zune hasn't gotten much love from Microsoft as of late, but that might change over time -- ZDNet's Mary Jo Foley noticed that the company is staffing up for a cloud-based multimedia project (by a group known as "Ventura Media Services") directed at PCs, TVs and mobile devices. "The team is a tight group of music and video lovers that create services and experiences revolving around music/video discovery and consumption," read a series of job postings that date back at least as far as July of 2010, calling for software developers in Beijing and Redmond who are familiar with the Microsoft Azure cloud platform. (Two of them have "Zune" in the job title.) While it's hard to say if this project is a major focus for Microsoft no matter how often the job posting says "large scale" (we count four times) it'd definitely be nice to have some competition for Google and Apple when they start drawing the multimedia-streaming battle lines.

2011年3月7日星期一

Google Maps For Android Now Redirecting You Around Traffic Automatically

Google Maps for Android is almost certainly one of the greatest applications released in the past few years. It was already a pretty decent application — then Google went and added the free turn-by-turn Navigation feature, and it entered a whole new plane. Pretty much overnight, it went from being a nice little addition on Android handsets to be a market disrupting must-have. Neither the software competitors nor the hardware GPS guys really seem to know what to do next.
Adding insult to injury, the Navigation feature is technically still in Beta, and they just keep making it better. Today’s addition? Automatic direction adjustments aimed at routing you around traffic. Google pulls down real-time and historical traffic data, compares it to your current route, and calculates whether things like backroads and side streets will get you from A to B faster than camping out on the freeway might. You don’t even have to press a button.
Android users, your maps app should automatically start taking advantage of the new routing mechanisms. iPhone users (including yours truly) get to sit around and be jealous.

Microsoft Now Seeding Windows Phone 7 On Nokia With A Billion Dollars Up Front

The strategic partnership between Microsoft and Nokia,announced in February, was regarded as auspicious by some and desperate by others, yet some specifics of the agreement were largely a mystery until today. Most notably, Microsoft was rumored to have led the partnership with hundreds of millions of dollars, outbidding Google (!) to woo the once-magnificent Finnish giant. Considering Google’s sights are increasingly set on the low-cost phone market, it’s interesting that they didn’t just write a blank check. Or maybe Nokia didn’t want to appear to be flattened underneath the Android machine. Either way, Microsoft won out in the end, and the settlement paid has been reported by Bloomberg to be over a billion dollars.
Considering the sums involved in control of even a small segment of the mobile world, a billion doesn’t even seem like much. But it is, of course, a billion dollars. The question is: even at that price, did Nokia sell itself short?

Nokia still has an impressive amount of brand strength, though nonstarters MeeGo and Symbian 3 have made that remaining brand an exceedingly precious resource. To be sure, as was discussed after the partnership was announced, a complete outsourcing of the OS to Microsoft sacrifices some of their brand, but in the end Nokia needed a competitive product, something they haven’t had for years. Strange, then, that they went to Microsoft, whose own mobile brand has been practically effaced from the earth, instead of the all-conquering Android. I’m sure they had their reasons. A billion of them, actually.
The upfront price being paid by Microsoft is an investment by a still-rich company that could pay itself off fairly quickly. A billion dollars is a lot of money, but it’s defraying the cost of R&D at Nokia, who then will pay Microsoft a license fee for every copy of Windows Phone 7 they ship. The agreement, according to the source (who cautions that it is not finalized), runs for five years.
Think about it. A billion dollars for a five-year partnership with Nokia? I think Microsoft is taking Nokia to school here.
Yet it’s a good thing for both, since by hitching their ships together, only one has to turn around to make it worth it for the other. On the other hand, the investment is lopsided in that if Nokia keeps going down, it’s still a coup for Microsoft, who will at the very least have shipped a few million more WP7 handsets than they would have otherwise. Microsoft loves to spend money on presence like that, and this billion-dollar purchase, while bigger than others it has made, is just the latest in a long line of similar moves.
There are some other provisions, less clear from this source, suggesting Microsoft is acquiring a number of patents and using some Nokia services in WP7. I’m afraid with Bing, Live, and Ovi, there might be too many cooks in the kitchen, but they’ve got time to work that out.
I’m hopeful, personally — not to say optimistic. Nokia just has so much inertia, and their mobile vision has always been so much different from Microsoft’s (both from WinMo and WP7), that I fear the product created will be a sort of worst-of-both-worlds monster. But with the wolves shooed from the door by this cash infusion and a little fire in the veins courtesy of executivemea culpas, they might just make something exciting happen. And if it doesn’t work out, hey, I can think of worse ways to spend a billion dollars.

Handset Hackers Getting Google’s Music Syncing Service For Android To Work A Bit Early

Sometimes you just gotta do things because you can, you know? It’s the sign of being a true gadget geek. Lets say you stumble across the Music application that comes built into the Motorola Xoom and other Honeycomb Android tablets — you’ve just gotta install that on an Android phone to see what happens, right?
Turns out, it does some pretty cool stuff. XDA-Dev member WhiteWidows found an APK for Honeycomb’s Music app, Frankensteined it onto his rooted phone in place of the default app, and then popped into the settings menu. In there, he found a new option: Sync Music.
He tapped the box, and let it do its thing overnight. Morning came, and sure enough: all of his tunes had been synced to some mysterious server in the cloud, and could be played back without issue. Even with a brand new, fresh SD card in the slot, his tunes played back no problem.
Not bad for a service that hasn’t even been officially announced, right?

2011年3月6日星期日

West Penn Allegheny Health System creating an emergency responder app, placing your life in far better hands

Creating a health-minded application for those who are unconscious, dead, or creeping awfully close to death might not do much good, but creating a health-minded application for those who care for the near-dead... now that's a novel concept! The West Penn Allegheny Health System has just churned out the EMS Field Partner app for iPod touch and iPhone, giving emergency medical services (EMS) professionals and other first responders the ability to easily sift through a variety of emergency conditions or complaints -- such as chest pain, stroke symptoms or fall injury, etc. -- and be directed to the closest WPAHS hospital that is most qualified to treat the patient. It also provides an interface with Google Maps and directions to the System's hospitals, not to mention "up to the minute traffic information as well." For more serious encounters, there's a direct link to West Penn Allegheny's LifeFlight Command Center, with the built-in location system telling the backend where to send an emergency helicopter. The app's available for free as we speak, but many of the features (like the chopper request, we're guessing) will require registration. We know, we know -- you had all sorts of crazy ideas.

Google flips Android kill switch, destroying a batch of malicious apps

When 21 rogue apps started siphoning off identifying information from Android phones and installing security holes, Google yanked the lot from Android Market, and called the authorities to boot. But what of the 50,000 copies already downloaded by unwitting users? That's what Google's dealing with this week, by utilizing Android's remote kill switch to delete them over the air. But that's not all, because this time the company isn't just removing offending packages, but also installing new code. The "Android Market Security Tool March 2011" will be remotely added to affected handsets to undo the exploit and keep it from sending your data out, as well as make you wonder just how much remote control Google has over our phones. Yes, we welcome our new Search Engine overlords and all that, so long as they've got our best interests at heart, but there's a certain irony in Google removing a backdoor exploit by using a backdoor of its own -- even one that (in this case) will email you to report what it's done.

2011年3月4日星期五

Disgruntled Android developer sounding battle cry, rallies troops, demands Market tweaks from Google

A dude making a living writing Android apps -- who, by all appearances, is an upstanding guy with actual quality software in the Android Market -- is taking Google to task this week for what he calls "unacceptable" treatment. His beef seems to originate from the unexplained pulling of one of his titles -- Rapid Download -- a fact that he discovered not through any sort of communication from Google, it seems, but by the fact that he noticed was no longer making any coin from it. He goes on to say that he was unable to get anyone in Mountain View to explain the situation until his third attempt, at which point he received some unhelpful "generic information" plus a threat tacked on that if he violated the rules again, he'd have all of his titles pulled. For someone whose Market apps are breadwinners, we can imagine that would be a little scary.

Long story short, this particular developer decided he wasn't going to take it -- not after paying "over $14,000 in 'service fees'" -- and started a site to get his story public and enlist fellow devs unhappy with the way Google's been treating them. Now, we can't vouch for the accuracy of the guy's story, but if this movement and ones like it gather enough steam, it puts Google in a precarious position; the Market, after all, is the crown jewel in the company's strategy of allowing only approved devices to be the most relevant to consumers. Take away the absolute importance of the Market -- like, say, Amazon is trying to do -- and the power structure starts to shift.

Update: If you look at the legacy Market posting for Rapid Download on AndroLib, we can immediately spot at least one thing that's wrong here -- the guy is encouraging users to infringe copyrights right in the product description. Whoops! Sure, Google should be more proactive in letting developers know where they went wrong... but if you don't see the problem in this, you probably have no business being a professional developer -- at least, not one that's claiming ethics on their side. Thanks, everyone!

Nielsen: Apple, RIM Are Now Beating Android OEMs In The U.S. Smartphone Race

Google’s Android OS is leading the pack for smartphone market share in the U.S., but when it comes to the largest smartphone manufacturer, RIM (NSDQ: RIMM) and Apple (NSDQ: AAPL) are neck-in-neck for the top position. Table after the jump.
The data, which comes from Nielsen and covers the period between November 2010 and February 2011, indicates that Apple and RIM are the biggest single smartphone vendors, at 27 percent each.
Research In Motion's BlackBerry Tour
Meanwhile, Android devices collectively make up 29 percent of all smartphones in the U.S., making it the most popular OS, but that number is divided up between three main vendors—HTC (12 percent), Motorola (NYSE: MMI) (10 percent) and Samsung (five percent)—plus a selection of smaller shares that get grouped as “others” and account for just two percent of all Android sales. (Those others probably include the likes of LG (SEO: 066570), ZTE, Sony (NYSE: SNE) Ericsson (NSDQ: ERIC) and Huawei).
Microsoft (NSDQ: MSFT), the other player that is deploying its OS across multiple vendors, has, at 10 percent, a far smaller market share than Android, but an equally fragmented number of vendors making devices on the platform.
Here are some takeaways:
—RIM and Apple, being both leaders in OS and in actual handsets sold, are in the stronger position as far as issues of fragmentation are concerned, compared to the likes of the Android and Windows Phone vendors.
—Nokia (NYSE: NOK), with only a two percent share of the market, has a very long way to go before it can claim a strong position, considering that it is partnering with an equally small-market-share OS, in the form of Microsoft’s Windows Phone. If anything, it would seem that partnering both with Google (NSDQ: GOOG) and Microsoft would have been the smart option, if one of Nokia’s biggest goals was to keep itself in the game in the U.S. market (and elsewhere). But that’s not something that has been entirely ruled out by either party.
—So far, HTC has been the most successful in playing the multiple OS game, but at a 19 percent share, it is still quite a ways behind RIM and Apple.
—Other data from Nielsen shows that in terms of age breakdown, all the OS’s are virtually identical, except for in one respect: Android leads by two percentage points as the most popular OS with 16-24 year olds. That points not only to lower prices but also securing key customers for years to come.

2011年3月2日星期三

Google spiking 21 malicious apps with big download counts from the Market (update: Android 2.2.2 and up are immune)

We're sure that the debate of a carefully controlled and curated environment like Apple's App Store versus a free-for-all like the Android Market will rage on for years to come, but here's something to chew on: Google just removed some 21 apps from the Market in the last day from a publisher going by Myournet for doing all sorts of naughty things to your device. Offenses include attempting to root your phone, uploading phone information (including IMEI) to who-knows-where, and -- most egregiously -- adding a backdoor that allows additional code to be pulled down and executed.

At least some of the apps are pirated versions of existing apps that have been re-uploaded at zero cost to the user, which makes them appealing... and the trick apparently works quite well, because the 21 managed to clock over 50,000 downloads before getting taken down. This isn't the first time malicious apps have shown up on smartphones -- far from it -- but it's probably the highest-profile case of a first-party app store being infiltrated by really bad stuff. If there's a silver lining, it's that Google was extraordinarily quick to respond once Android Police reported the situation -- the site says it took less than five minutes from the time they reached out to the time the apps actually went offline. Still, that's little consolation if you've already installed your "free" copy of Super History Eraser. Hit the source links for the full list of pulled apps.

Update: Android Central points out that the type of root exploit used in these apps was patched in Android 2.2.2 and up, so Nexus One and Nexus S owners should be fine; everyone else is left out in the cold, though, thanks to the vexing third-party update lag.

Google now adding web-based in-app payments, probably some time in May

It's not enough that you'll soon be able to make in-app purchases on Android, Google wants to give you an outlet for your app spending online as well. The search giant is hard at work turning last year's acquisition of Jambool and its Social Gold software into a web-based in-app payments platform it can call its own. Jambool's proprietors have word that Google's system is now in beta, which has led it to close new signups for the Social Gold offering, ahead of halting payment processing entirely on May 31st. That should serve as a pretty reliable guide for when to expect Google to flip the switch on its in-app purchasing service, which we're hearing will include some level of integration with Google Checkout and Google accounts. As TechCrunch points out, the next Google I/O gathering is scheduled for May 10th -- sounds about the right time for us to be introduced to this new, app-based way for separating us from our hard-earned cash.

The App That Biting: Google Pulls 21 Dodgy Apps From Android Market

Given that collectively we are approaching 1 billion mobile apps on the market, it’s a surprise that you don’t hear about problems like this more often: Google (NSDQ: GOOG) has pulled 21 “counterfeit” apps from the Android Market that were given the name and appearance of popular Android apps, but actually contained malware that collected user information and potentially more. The news follows reports yesterday about Apple (NSDQ: AAPL) App Store users getting their accounts hacked, potentially through the use of iffy gift cards.
Super Guitar Solo Android malwareThe news about the 21 apps was originally uncovered by an Android user called Lompolo on Reddit. The blog Android Police notes that Google pulled the 21 offending apps within five minutes of being notified aobut them, and is also pulling them remotely from users’ devices.
What was the issue? Apparently a publisher called Myournet posted 21 apps on Android, with some of them copying apps that are already popular downloads. The titles included Falling Down, Super Guitar Solo (pictured), Scientific Calculator and Photo Editor, as well as several titles with racier names to lure in the punters: collectively, Lompolo notes that the apps were downloaded between 50,000 and 200,000 times over the course of four days.
The apps were mocked up to look like their original counterparts, except that they also contained “‘rageagainstthecage’ root exploit” code to collect information such as device IMEIs, user IDs and country and language information. The code seems to be able to extract other details, although it’s not yet clear what.
The problem seems to be that while Google has pulled the apps, it may not be able to extract the code that would have gone onto the devices through those apps.
We have contacted Google to ask whether it has an official response to this story and will update the post as we learn more.
This is not the first instance of malware or hacking around apps—earlier this week we noticed reports of people complaining of unauthorised app purchases on their iTunes accounts—a problem thought to be connected to certain gift cards. As the app market matures, there will likely be more cases coming up like these. For what it’s worth, such cases do seem to be a vote in favor of smaller and more closed systems.

Gogo Inflight Internet app making flying sign-ins a snap

If you're one of those people who spends way too much time in airplane seats, you've probably been thrilled with Gogo Inflight Internet. The company provides Internet service on all AirTran and Virgin America flights, and has service on some flights on Air Canada, Alaska, American, Delta, United, and US Airways flights. They're expanding to more aircraft and airlines in 2011, so being able to send TwitPics of your seatmate or video of dancing flight attendants will become entirely too commonplace.
Gogo wants to make it even easier for you to get online while you're airborne. The free Gogo Inflight Internet app is designed to detect if your flight is equipped with the Gogo network, and if it is (and provided that you've also signed up with the company ahead of the flight) you can get online with a tap of a button.
For those of us who still haven't been on a Wi-Fi equipped aircraft and need to sign up for a Gogo account, there's even a button to let you do that while in the app. Unlike the very stupid or naive person who left a 1-star review of the app in the App Store griping that the Gogo service was not free, I think most TUAW readers are bright enough to understand that this app simply signs you into the service -- you still have to pay for the privilege, which can run anywhere from US$4.95 for a short flight to $34.95 for a month of unlimited in-flight Wi-Fi. The app works on any iOS device, although it's really designed for an iPhone or iPod touch.
The TUAW crew is used to seeing fearless leader Victor Agreda wandering the virtual newsroom while on Gogo-equipped flights. I'm just waiting for the opportunity to use Gogo's service to do the first inflight episode of TUAW TV Live... after the airplane reached 10,000 feet and the crew has given us the OK to use approved electronic devices, of course.

2011年3月1日星期二

News : paidContent 2011, March 3, NYC: Quality, Quantity & Mass Content

In one of those timing-is-everything twists, we’ll be convening paidContent 2011; The Next Decade in Digitalon March 3 at TheTimesCenter in New York just one week after Google’s “farmer” algorithm tweak shook up the mass content space—and our first panel takes on that very topic. The rise of mass content operations has resulted in companies trying to go against the tide while using many of the same tactics and most—like Demand Media, for example—claim quality as a goal. When a business can be damaged by a flick of the Google (NSDQ: GOOG) algorithm and when everything is SEOd to the max, what’s the advantage of mass content?
Google logo in the magnifying glassThose are some of the questions Larry Dignan, Editor-in-Chief, ZDNet & SmartPlanet will address with his panel:
Chris Ahearn, President, Reuters (NYSE: TRI) Media; Luke Beatty, VP & GM, Yahoo! (NSDQ: YHOO) Contributor Network / Associated Content; and Lewis Dvorkin, Chief Product Officer, Forbes Media. As is the case with all our events, paidContent 2011 isn’t top down—attendees are participants, so bring your questions and insights.
Some of our other speakers include: Arianna Huffington, Co-Founder & Editor-in-Chief, The Huffington Post and Tim Armstrong, Chairman & CEO, AOL; (NYSE: AOL) Lauren Zalaznick, Chairman, Entertainment & Digital Networks/Integrated Media, NBC Universal (NSDQ: CMCSA), kicking off the day; Nick Denton, Founder, Gawker Media;Dan Rose, VP, Partnerships & Platform Marketing, Facebook;Greg Clayman, Publisher, The Daily—and our lunchtime Q&A speakers, Joel Hyatt, Executive Vice Chairman & Co-Founder, Current Media and Keith Olbermann, Chief News Officer, Executive Producer and Host, Current TV. You can check the event site to see the full agenda and speaker list.

2011年2月28日星期一

Google’s Building 44 Getting Its Honeycomb Statue

At this point, it’s pretty much tradition: Google releases a new major build of Android to the public, and a statue themed around that build’s codename (like Froyo, or Donut, or Gingerbread) goes up in its honor at the Android Team’s building (Building 44) across from the Google Campus.
The first official Honeycomb (Android 3.0) device, the Motorola Xoom, just hit the shelves last week — and sure enough, the Honeycomb statue just went up. Android Developer AdvocateJustin Mattson tweeted out the shot above to celebrate. Rockin’ both the Android robot and a big ol’ nasty lookin’ honeybee, this statue is quite possibly the coolest one yet. Check behind the jump for a shot of all of the other statues kickin’ it.