nancy_gohring
Writer

Bluetooth will be missing from Google Android

news
Aug 22, 20082 mins

Developers are left to wonder what a lack of "comprehensive" Bluetooth API really means

While developers have been hard at work building Android applications that can use GPS, Wi-Fi, and cameras, they just discovered they likely won’t be able to offer applications that use one common mobile phone feature: Bluetooth.

The most recent Android SDK, released on Monday, says that Android 1.0 won’t include a “comprehensive” Bluetooth API.

[ Read about Google’s unhappy Android developers. ]

Developers aren’t exactly sure what that means, and a Google spokeswoman said the company plans to elaborate later on Friday in a blog post.

Some developers contributing to Google’s Android forum say they find it hard to believe that Android 1.0, the first version of the Linux-based mobile operating system expected to become available soon, won’t support Bluetooth. “HTC would not release a smartphone in this day and age that lacked Bluetooth support,” wrote a developer going by the name Jeff Craig on the forum.

HTC’s Dream phone is expected to be the first on the market to run Android software.

Google may plan to build support for Bluetooth into Android so that end-users can wirelessly link standard Bluetooth gear, such as ear pieces, to the phone. But a lack of APIs would mean that developers couldn’t build applications that use Bluetooth.

Some developers have focused on the word “comprehensive” to surmise that a future SDK update that Google has said might come in September could include very basic Bluetooth support.

End-users and developers alike have eagerly anticipated the release of Android. Google’s software along with Apple’s iPhone software are rare new entrants into the mobile phone market.

While recent rumors suggested that Android would be released later than expected, Google has maintained that the first Android devices are on schedule to appear before the end of the year.

nancy_gohring

Nancy Gohring is a freelance journalist who started writing about mobile phones just in time to cover the transition to digital. She's written about PCs from Hanover, cellular networks from Singapore, wireless standards from Cyprus, cloud computing from Seattle and just about any technology subject you can think of from Las Vegas. Her work has appeared in the New York Times, Computerworld, Wired, the Seattle Times and other well-respected publications.

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