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Google Developed a Software to Dethrone iPad

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Google vs iPad
Google showed off a Honeycomb version of its Android operating system that will debut on the upcoming Motorola Xoom tablet that won rave reviews at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas last month. Honeycomb is tailored for the new generation of tablet-sized computers. The free, open-source operating system is expected to quickly be built into an array of touchscreen tablets in a booming market currently dominated by the iPad launched by Apple last year. In a sign that Google is intent on wooing the developers behind the "apps" fueling the popularity of smartphones and tablets, executives here stressed that Honeycomb is built as a platform for software innovation. Google also announced the launch of an Android Market webstore at market.android.com, where people can get work or play applications for devices running on the mobile operating software.

The Internet giant set out to address a long-standing complaint by allowing developers to make money from in-application transactions such as buying virtual goods, music or other digital offerings. Today, they're releasing code for in-app monetization to the entire Android developer community. Disney Mobile general manager Bart Decrem said the US entertainment powerhouse had held off bringing its hit "Tap Tap Revenge" music game to Android devices until songs could be sold to players.

Tap Tap Revenge was one of three Disney games for Android unveiled by Decrem at the Google event. Disney's most successful mobile game, Tap Tap has been downloaded more than 50 million times. The slew of applications for Honeycomb demonstrated after the presentation included interactive software to link tablet users to CNN news stories, images and video. A free CNN application for Honeycomb tablets will launch "in the near future," according to Gump.

The Honeycomb event took place on the same day that News Corp.'s Rupert Murdoch unveiled The Daily, a digital newspaper created exclusively for the iPad. Murdoch, an enthusiastic fan of the iPad, said The Daily will only be available on Apple's tablet computer for now but will eventually appear on other tablets. The Daily will be sold through Apple's App Store and iTunes and cost 99 cents a week or $39.99 a year.

Apple has apparently begun more firmly enforcing a rule that financial transactions in applications must go through its payment system, with the Cupertino, California-based firm getting its 30-percent cut. It reportedly rejected a Sony application linking people to the Japanese firm's online shop for digital books for its electronic reader because sales would be consummated outside of the Apple App Store.

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