Android 2.2 To Add Tethering, Wi-Fi Hotspot Benchmark tests reportedly show the refreshed platform, codenamed Froyo, is 450% faster than Google's Android 2.1. By Esther Shein InformationWeek May 13, 2010 12:30 PM The next update for Google’s Android mobile operating system, Android 2.2, codenamed Froyo, will support built-in tethering via USB and Wi-Fi, according to published reports. Tethering is a function that lets users hook up their mobile phones and use them as modems in order to share internet connectivity with other devices over a USB or Wi-Fi connection, in a ‘MiFi’ mobile hotspot model. Froyo is reported to be shipping to Nexus One customers on or before next week’s Google I/O developer conference in San Francisco. Reports claim benchmark tests show the refreshed platform is 450% faster than Google’s Android Éclair 2.1, its predecessor. If accurate, this would enable Froyo to handle tasks such as video processing and executing Web programming languages more smoothly than Éclair. It is unclear whether carriers will enable USB and Wi-Fi tethering on Android 2.2 for a cost, or if they will allow it at all. On Wednesday, Sprint announced that it would be charging an additional $30 per month for the Evo's hotspot functionality. Verizon offers a free hotspot on the Palm Pre, but also sells its MiFi hotspot devices for $60 per month. Notably, unlike the other U.S. carriers, AT&T hasn't enabled iPhone tethering yet. It sells separate plans for each individual device so customers with an iPhone, and iPad and a MacBook, will need to purchase three separate plans to get all three devices hooked up to the Internet using AT&T. With Wifi being so pervasive, this next iteration of Android “has very interesting potential consequences to expand the influence of smartphones across your life, really,’’ said Mike Morgan, senior analyst, mobile devices, at ABI Research. “As homes and Wifi start to increase in penetration in the digital wireless living room, the ability to interact with your smartphone expands the use cases … turning this thing into a universal remote control.” Google has not confirmed any details about Froyo, except that it will include integrated Adobe Flash support. Widely expected features include FM radio, color trackball notifications, additional free RAM, enhancements to OpenGL ES 2.0 and other stability fixes. Right now, Android phone owners must manually update their applications. With Froyo, users will be able to set their phone to automatically upgrade applications in the background. There is also speculation on developer forums that Android 2.2 will let users install applications on an SD card, which has been a popular feature request, especially from those who want to install many apps, but are limited by the small built-in memory of their phone. Original... SW
That's because the carriers still have a say in what happens with Android before the updates are released to handsets. One of the only few things I like about WP7 is they are cutting out the carriers on OS updates. Google needs to do start doing the same.
I think it's great if Android will support native tethering/mifi. If cellular operators start blocking that, it's going to backfire by giving them more of a negative image ("Walled garden" etc..). People are going to tether anyway with 3rd party apps, or since the Android OS is open source, may just edit the code to re-enable it.
I was waiting for this, but I'm over it. G1 owners got several upgrades, but we are currently at 1.6. There is much debate, recrimination, moaning, rending of garments and gnashing of teeth over whether Android 2.0 or 2.1 will ever make it to the G1 on T-Mobile. As soon as the myTouch 3G Slide is released, assuming it has good reviews, this issue will become moot. Most people with G1s who care about such things (i.e. early adopters), are about ready for their subsidized upgrades. Most likely I'll get 2.1 when I change phones. No biggie. SW Mozilla/5.0 (Linux; U; Android 1.6; en-us; T-Mobile G1 Build/DMD64) AppleWebKit/528.5+ (KHTML, like Gecko) Version/3.1.2 Mobile Safari/525.20.1
I don't have to wait for Dell to decide when I get a Windows update on my laptop, why should I wait for T-Mo to test/package/certify/screw up the Android release? SW Mozilla/5.0 (Linux; U; Android 1.6; en-us; T-Mobile G1 Build/DMD64) AppleWebKit/528.5+ (KHTML, like Gecko) Version/3.1.2 Mobile Safari/525.20.1
From what I've seen on the leaked ROMs and then the final release for the Samsung Moment, it was pretty much about the manufacturer getting it to work.