It's hard to describe the frustration of putting my trust in them and then watching so many other devices coming out with and being upgraded to Android 4.0 all around me, while I'm left in the dark.
Google, phone manufacturers, and carriers all seem to have a distinct "fire and forget" mindset regarding phones. As soon as it's on the market they move on to the next one, and those of us locked into a 1 or 2 year contract are left in the dust.
https://groups.google.com/forum/?fromgroups#!topic/android-b...
But I understand your concerns. For me the actual disappointment came from announcing the Nexus One would not receive it at all. The internal storage and the GPU might indeed suck for 4.0, but I find it hard to believe that there was absolutely no way to upgrade it, especially from the makers of Android. I'd expect a Nexus device to get at least 2 major version upgrades (so a 4.0 device would get 5.0 and 6.0, in this case).
Still, the Nexus tablet is something Google should've done a long time ago, and I was very surprised they didn't release a Nexus tablet in the same time with the Galaxy Nexus, to celebrate the unification of the phone and tablet software. To me that seemed like a no-brainer.
The fact that they decided to take the low-end and try to increase the Android tablet market share quickly, is also a welcome strategy, but I still think they need to be very aggressive about getting tablet-optimized apps from developers to be really successful.
There are other reasons why tab apps are few and far between as well, but not having an n1 equivalent tablet held me back. I gave up waiting and bought a tf prime in December and am finally working on a tablet specific app, but I wonder how long before I'll have to replace it.
See Google employee Jean-Baptiste Queru's Google+ post and follow-up comments on this topic: https://plus.google.com/112218872649456413744/posts/LG8VK9NN...
Relevant snippet below:
As for the updates to flagship devices (including the Nexus phones), even though Google tries to get builds ready for all devices at the same time, operator approval varies from one operator to the other and from one device to the other. The 8-month rule of thumb doesn't apply to flagship devices, since all phases are designed to happen at the same time for those, but there's still a bit of operator certification and approval at the end that can't overlap with anything else, and that's what explains the slight device-to-device variance even for flagship devices.
If Apple could manage it then Google should be able to, at least if they tried properly.
Regardless, it took several months too long, for either model.
Amen. One begins to realize that the serious upside of a monolithic product (e.g. the iPhone) is that your reputation is tied to a single product. With Android, there is no single company to blame for poor software support or constrained upgrade path (Google? HTC? AT&T?)
My sense is that Google is giving OEMs far too many options. The message should be, "Hey OEM, here's the Android project. Do a git clone and install it on your phone. Then you can call it Android. If that's not good enough for you, do a fork and call it whatever you want, but don't you dare call it Android."
I think that the tacit assumption when you buy a "Google Phone" is that it will have an upgrade path similar to the iPhone, and so free of the dysfunctional interplay between Google and the OEM (and, thanks to Google's weight, maybe even the carrier). But this has proven not to be the case. (Google still has a lot of explaining to do as to why the N1 doesn't get Android 4).
No, they really don't. Google has been clear that, in their opinion, the Nexus One hardware doesn't support ICS. And while we all know someone will shoehorn a version of ICS on there somehow (after all, someone did it for the G1), there's plenty of evidence that Google's opinion is reasonable:
- the limited internal storage (512 MB) [ICS distributions are substantially bigger than Gingerbread ones and there were plenty of Nexus One users pinched for space on Gingerbread]
- the relatively weak GPU [less ability to support and probably less benefit from the new rendering architecture]
- no front-facing camera [i.e. no Face Unlock]
- no NFC [i.e. no Android Beam]
- ...
Feel free to complain that Google and HTC made bad choices when designing the Nexus One, if you want. In retrospect, they clearly did. But it isn't at all hard to explain why the Nexus One isn't getting ICS.
I don't ask with snark, but with genuine curiosity. I heard lots of people happy they got the free ones... But didn't hear about many people buying them.
I actually think they WOULD do better off if they made it themselves. Or at least just let Motorola do an exclusive Google-branded model akin to the Nexus.
It's a great device for what it is, and the built-in 3G has actually saved my bacon on a couple of occasions. It made a great loaner device for when my girlfriend's parents had to drive halfway across the country with just a candybar pay-as-you-go phone.
Google's failing was twofold, in my opinion:
1) They initially said the device would sell cheaply, in the $200-300 range. Instead, the two launch devices were $500+, a price range which encroached on territory already covered by other, more powerful, and more featureful devices.
2) Lack of proper marketing. The Chromebook may have been less powerful, but it had a battery life like you wouldn't believe. I used mine daily, taking it to meetings at work to take notes on, browsing the web on breaks, yet I only had to charge it every few days, sometimes just once or twice a week. And that SSD! Every time I showed it to my coworkers, the first thing I did was close the lid to put it into hibernation, then re-open it and show how it was instantly back at its previous state. It truly behaved as though it remained powered on throughout the process, despite going into a low-power state that could last for weeks. Unfortunately, these and other great features were unknown to the average consumer.
As far as updates, however, their setup is top-notch. It automatically downloads and installs updates just like the Chrome browser does, and they update fairly often. I only wish they could do the same with their phones.
If they were $200-300, then they not only are a great value for a laptop, but would provide fair competition against tablets, which many people want just as a cheap laptop.
But when you get to the $500 price point, you lose any advantage over the ipad, and start to encroach on the $900 price point of the macbook air, who's ssd and battery life is just as amazing as the chromebook, with better support and better specs.
The Motorola Xoom was a Google experience device but the initial high cost seems to have scared buyers away. Google does not have experience making hardware so it's better they let Motorola make it, but with Google branding.
[1] http://www.pcworld.com/article/186399/google_faces_deluge_of...
Personally I think they're going to have to bite the bullet and become a real consumer electronics company but that's going to be a very painful transition.