"The volume and variety of Android devices continues to surpass our wildest expectations — but we're not slowing down," wrote Android honcho Andy Rubin in a post on the Google blog announcing Monday's release.
Rubin also reiterated his company's mantra about the Nexus S: that it's "pure Google" — which he defined as having "unlocked, unfiltered access to the best Google mobile services and the latest and greatest Android releases and updates." He might have also added that the handset's OS purity means that it's unencumbered by the, ahem, improvements tacked on by Android-using hardware vendors and service providers.
More important than the new Googly smartphone, however, is Monday's release of Android 2.3 — aka "Gingerbread" — along with updated versions of the Android SDK Tools, NDK, and ADT Plugin for Eclipse. The Nexus S is simply a phone; Android 2.3 is a (semi-)open source operating system — and one that Google hopes that multiple vendors will use to further carve away at market share now enjoyed by the iPhone.
Google Nexus S Smartphone
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