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Sorry, I guess I should have added some context. It was a response to Steve Jobs and was widely publicised on tech blogs at the time.

http://www.pcmag.com/print_article2/0,1217,a=255840,00.asp?h...

Google's Andy Rubin hit back at Steve Jobs Monday with a tweet that touted the openness of Google's Android platform.

Rubin, who serves as vice president of engineering at Google, posted a message to the micro-blogging site that might be somewhat confusing to those not familiar with the ins and out of Android coding.

Translation: Rubin's tweet includes the commands needed to start compiling a copy of Android on a home Linux machine. He's stressing that anyone can develop for, hack, or even create their own version of Android.



I remember the tweet, I just wasn't sure what point you were making by quoting it.

But this does say that by Andy Rubin's own definition of "open", Honeycomb is not "open". Unless there is some big part of this discussion/argument I'm missing, it's not available for download/compiling, right?


Right, this contradiction leads to the realization that Google is, to a certain extent, using "open" selectively as a marketing term without full commitment to the idea.

The thing that makes this so blatant is the succinctness of Rubin's definition of "open".




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