Linked by Thom Holwerda on Thu 26th Jan 2012 09:09 UTC
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Go to the Kindle Fire page and find where it says it's running Android. If the manufacturer of the device doesn't say it's running Android, and it certainly doesn't pass Google's definition of a device that can call itself an Android device, how is it an Android device?
It runs Android applications just fine?
"Go to the Kindle Fire page and find where it says it's running Android. If the manufacturer of the device doesn't say it's running Android, and it certainly doesn't pass Google's definition of a device that can call itself an Android device, how is it an Android device?
It runs Android applications just fine? "
(In theory) so will the Playbook.





Member since:
2005-07-06
As I said in another post, go to the Kindle Fire page and find where it says it's running Android. If the manufacturer of the device doesn't say it's running Android, and it certainly doesn't pass Google's definition of a device that can call itself an Android device, how is it an Android device? Why should Google get the market share credit, why isn't the Fire split out into a different category when clearly Amazon means to differentiate it?