Your next car might come with Android embedded

collected by :Maya Tony

As it stated in In fact, Google Maps that is possibly one of the most practical services to have built-in to a car that might be the best bit. What's more, Google Maps has been around for a long time now, a decade or so, that means which it's got progressively better and a lot more powerful. As part of an in-car infotainment system it could mean which you'll be waving goodbye to that clunky sat-nav device once and for all. Kal Mos, global vice pinhabitant of Alliance Connected cars at Renault-Nissan-Mitsubishi, added, "by the integration of the Android platform into our infotainment systems, we are adding a new level of intelligence to our connected vehicles. We're thrilled to partner by Renault-Nissan-Mitsubishi to bring Google Assistant, Google Maps, and other popular apps via the Play Store and Android to drivers and passengers around the world."


Android at 10: Google's mobile OS has come a long way

Android Market, the precursor to Google Play, had just a handful of apps. If the iPhone knocked BlackBerry, Symbian and Windows Mobile off their respective perches, it was Android that put them in the ground. It's saying that the companies behind those competing platforms had to either use Android or embrace it to remain relevant. It's even present on PCs -- thanks to Chrome OS, you can run Android apps on your laptop. Simply put, Google built an OS designed to go the distance, and it's likely to have a healthy future.

Android at 10: Google's mobile OS has come a long way

Android 1.0 versus Android 9: A visual tour of how far we've come in a decade

as informed in For anyone that might be curious, here's a quick visual exploration of Android 1.0 vs. Android 9 Pie. For a more detailed exploration of the changes made in Android version-by-version, I encourage you to check out Ron Amadeo's rolling history of Android. The T-Mobile G1/HTC Dream and Pixel 2 XL may be profoundly different hardware, but Android is continue Android a decade later, and its most basic and recognizable features are continue there. The more substantial difference in camera apps from Android 1.0 to Android 9 makes sense. Pardon the joke, but Android Market is dead for early Android, and our site was not around back then.





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