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(Credit:
CNET UK)

HTC Desire owners on Vodafone’s U.K. network received an over-the-air update early Tuesday that came with some unexpected features.

No, it wasn’t Android 2.2, code-named Froyo, which brings with it considerable speed updates, home screen enhancements, and tweaks that make it easier to update and manage installed applications. Instead, it was a handful of Vodafone-branded applications, a new Vodafone-branded restart animation, and changes to the user’s home screen applications and Web bookmarks.

Angry users have hopped on Vodafone’s forums to voice their disapproval. Many are irate over the fact that these apps, which include a music shop, an additional Web browser (with Vodafone’s Web site as its start page), a shopping application, and an app for the carrier’s 360 social experience, were not mentioned in the upgrade’s release notes, and that they made changes to existing user preferences without asking.

What has proven to be the bigger pain point, however, is that the newly installed applications come as part of the operating-system update, meaning that they cannot be removed from the phone without users rooting their software. This is akin to jailbreaking on the
iPhone, as it voids your warranty from HTC and can get you in trouble with your carrier. On the plus side, users with rooted devices would be able to install a “vanilla” version of the Android OS that would not include Vodafone’s branding.

Vodafone put out a statement on its forums, as well as many of the existing forum threads about the update, saying:

To ensure the handset is optimised for performance on Vodafone, we will sometimes add or remove certain functions. As an example, we would remove an App that only worked in America (e.g. Netflix) to avoid confusion for people trying to use it in the UK. We also remove other operators’ settings from the handset to free up onboard memory.

In the case of these applications, some users are reporting that these apps, in fact, take up more memory than a previous version, and that because they cannot be deleted, it has left their devices less useful than before the update.

Because Google’s Android is an open operating system, carriers, device manufacturers, and even users are able to create their own builds of the operating system that can change the way certain features function. In the case of Android this has led to considerable delays in the rollout of new updates compared to Google’s own release schedule for the now-retired Nexus One. Owners of the Desire on several other carriers, including Telstra, reported that 2.2 was being pushed out to their handsets as early as Monday.

Thanks to CNET reader Graham for the tip.

Back at the World Wide Developers Conference in June, Apple CEO Steve Jobs announced that the company had paid out more than a billion dollars to application developers through the App Store. But what about those developers who had created something that hadn’t sold so well?

There’s a new service from application tracking site iPhone Application List, called the App Exchange that is playing matchmaker to such developers. There, they can effectively offload their creation to another party who might be able to do a better job, or at least use some of the app’s technology in another product.

Developers who have created an application within the past year, can send the details about it–including things like active users and the number of downloads and in-app purchases to the site. In turn, the company puts it up in a directory where others can get in touch with the developer and make an offer. Built on top of all that is a discussion forum, and any related information about the app, as per what can be found through the
iPhone Application List’s directory.

As of me writing this, there are only two applications listed on the exchange: Barcode Reader from Shape Services, and Sky Racer 2 from Shape’s subsidiary Warelex:

The first, and only two apps on the App Exchange so far are from the same company. One's a utility, and the other is a game.

(Credit:
Screenshot by Josh Lowensohn/CNET)

An iPhone Applications List representative says the next phase is for the site to act as a broker for buyers, so that developers will be able to buy and sell apps directly through them without having to do any of the legwork. Until then, the company plans to maintain a listing of who has been selling their apps, as well as who they’ve sold their technology to.

Related: AppBackr brings a cash advance to iPhone devs

Android Code | Social Code 2 Capital Ex 2010

Posted by admin On August - 1 - 2010ADD COMMENTS