Google present the Nexus One, its first mobile phone smart
The device, is a phone 'smart', with 3.7-inch touch screen, expandable memory up to 32GB and a 5 megapixel camera with flash LED technology. The device, according to Internet forums, will be faster than the Motorola Droid and somewhat lighter than Apple's iPhone, so far considered the king of the smart phone market.
Until now, Google had kept its launch into the mobile phone business on the backburner it had only a slight incursion into the market in 2008 with the launch of its own operating system for phones, Android, which is used in several models of different companies. But with today's announcement, the company will give the California company a change of course to their strategy and put them on the front line, with a device and software compilation.
Google will not have distributors to sell the phone, but will do so directly from their website.
According to Gizmodo.com web technology information, the Nexus One will be offered in the U.S. for $180 if you sign a two-year contract with operator T-Mobile. The normal price to buy will be $ 530, below the $699, for example, a 32 GB iPhone 3G, without a contract.
The press believes that this is not the only surprise that Google will provide during 2010: some speculators say the search engine plans another foray into the hardware market with nothing less than a netbook. Google will not be assembling the laptops but Google has confirmed it is working with several PC manufacturers to produce netbooks running on the operating system OS Chrome and expects the first to reach the market later this year. The Google netbook, according to technology blogs, will cost about U.S. $300 and will not have a traditional hard drive but will use a flash memory and the Internet to store information. The device will include a 10.1-inch touch screen and other features like Wi-Fi and Bluetooth. The technology company aims to change the habits of users on the use of emails.
Google Wave, the new collaboration tool for on-line Google, should be accessible to the public before year's end, as recently reported their own creators. For now, Wave is available in beta and only for a limited number of Internet users invited by Google. The service still has to polish out a lot of clinches and increase it attractiveness to the average user, but experts have predicted that it will make a marked difference to the way we communicate on the network.