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Google Shows Off Android 'Honeycomb' Tablet

 & Lance Ulanoff Former Editor in Chief

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Andy Rubin Shows off Honeycomb TabletSAN FRANCISCO - Google Mobile Platform vice president Andy Rubin literally arrived with a bag full of tricks at the D: Get Into Mobile Conference, showing publicly for the very first time an Android "Honeycomb" tablet.

The roughly 10-inch Motorola device was sleek, black, thin, and sported an Android interface unlike any we've seen before. There was a very clean homepage, but the app page looked almost Apple iPad-like. Plus, when Rubin brought up the Gmail app, it looked almost exactly like Gmail on the iPad.

Rubin didn't offer my many spec details on the tablet, which he joked would cost $10,000, but he did say it was running an Nvidia dual core CPU (presumably a Tegra).

Mostly, Rubin showed off an upcoming version of Google Maps for Android (which should release "within days"). It adds a new vector-based map drawing system, which appeared to improve speed and map flexibility. As Rubin manipulated the map with his fingers, it changed from a flat map to a three-dimensional outline of the roads and buildings.

In general, Rubin said he believes tablets "represent a fundamental change in the way computing works." By allowing users to interact with them physically, tablets have, Rubin explained, "removed a degree of abstraction."

Honeycomb should release sometime next year and most major OEMs planning on building Android tablets have expressed interest in using this version of the Android platform—which Rubin said is built for tablets. He did, however, say that Honeycomb adds APIs called fragments that allow one app to hold multiple views for different platforms (phones and tablets).

Rubin also showed off the recently unveiled Google Nexus S. Like the Nexus One, the S is a "pure Android, pure Google phone." It's available at Best Buy for $199 with a T-Mobile contract and $529 unlocked. Google is not trying to sell the Nexus S on its own. Rubin admitted that with the Nexus One and Google online retail store, the company "bit off more than it could chew," and realized that instead of trying to negotiate deals with every carrier in every language, their resources could be better used elsewhere.

Rubin literally waved around the small black phone to show off its new gyroscope. He also demonstrated the Nexus S's new Near Field Communication capabilities. Built on Android 2.3 (Gingerbread), this is the first Android phone to natively support NFC. Since NFC support is actually part of Gingerbread, Rubin expects to see many more phones offering the technology. To demonstrate how it works, Rubin held the back of the phone (which has an NFC antenna embedded in the back of its case) against a special card. It read the code in the card, which led the phone to a URL and a video, which then played on the phone's large screen.

You'll find pics of the tablet and Nexus S in the slideshow.

About Our Expert

Lance Ulanoff

Lance Ulanoff

Former Editor in Chief

A 25-year industry veteran and award-winning journalist, Lance Ulanoff is the former Editor in Chief of PCMag.com. Lance Ulanoff has covered technology since PCs were the size of suitcases, "on line" meant "waiting" and CPU speeds were measured in single-digit megahertz. He's traveled the globe to report on a vast array of consumer and business technology. While a digital veteran, Lance spent his early years writing for newspapers and magazines. He's been online since 1996 and ran Web sites for three national publications: HomePC, Windows Magazine and PC Magazine. A graduate of Hofstra University, Lance has history with the PCMag brand that spans nearly two decades, having worked there in the early 90s and returning in 2000 to relaunch PCMag.com. In 2007 he was named Editor-in-Chief. During his tenure, Lance guided the brand to a 100% digital existence. In his capacity as Senior Vice President, Content, for Ziff Davis, Inc., Lance oversees content strategy for all of Ziff Davis' Web sites. His long-running column on PCMag.com has earned him a Bronze award from the ASBPE. Winmag.com, HomePC.com and PCMag.com have all been honored under Lance's guidance. Lance served host of PCMag's weekly podcast, PCMag Radio and makes frequent appearances on national, international, and local news programs including Fox News, the Today Show, Good Morning America, CNBC, CNN, Bloomberg TV, NY1, CNN HLN, BBC, New York's Eyewitness News, News Channel 4, and WCBS. He has also offered commentary on National Public Radio and been interviewed by newspapers and radio stations around the country. Lance has been an invited guest speaker at numerous technology conferences including Think Mobile, CEA Line Shows, Digital Life, RoboBusiness, RoboNexus, Business Foresight and Digital Media Wire's Games and Mobile Forum. Lance also posts to Twitter all day long. You can follow his tech industry activities and thoughts at http://twitter.com/LanceUlanoff

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