Monday, April 4, 2011

Google wants to standardize and ARM Honeycomb

Google Android 3.0 would standardize and is in talks with ARM to provide a standard that would facilitate the development and application updates for mobile Android. The idea is simple. By providing a standard for Honeycomb (Android 3.0), Google would encourage developers to build applications that will run identically on any platform.

The system tray now has the great disadvantage of having a relatively thin software park and at the time of the App Store, is a harmful situation. Moreover, as we often see the diversity of variants of the ARM architecture means that the deployment of updates is to thank you for manufacturers, which is not always optimal.

According to DigiTimes, Google would solve this problem by developing standards on which manufacturers could build shelves. All shelves have a common denominator Honeycomb facilitating the development and optimization of the system. It seems that this is a response to new relationships between Microsoft and ARM (see "Microsoft and ARM are working on CPU").

The platform Avanced RISC Machine is more than ever the focus of popular terminals and work with the firm means being able to optimize its solutions for its architecture.

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