Google’s phone app can tell you why businesses are calling

Google is doing more to help Android users figure out whether calls from unknown numbers are genuine or spam with a Verified Calls tool. Reports in June suggested such a feature was coming to the Phone app.If Google has verified a business that’s cal...

KitKat Phone: Google Announces $349 Nexus 5 with Android 4.4 KitKat


Google has come up with a ton of new stuff, chief among which are the Nexus 5 smart phone and Android 4.4 KitKat operating system. The former is worth almost $349 while the latter contains a range of...

KitKat Phone: Google Announces $349 Nexus 5 with Android 4.4 KitKat


Google has come up with a ton of new stuff, chief among which are the Nexus 5 smart phone and Android 4.4 KitKat operating system. The former is worth almost $349 while the latter contains a range of...

Details of Nexus 5 leaked in Google Play Store


The latest news has simply confirmed its existence once more as this time, Google itself had accidently put the details of the smartphone on its Play Store. Though removed quickly, yet for the...

Google Nexus 4 Sale is Over in US


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Moto X officially launches


At a press event today, Google unveiled its best creation, a true Google phone, finally. Sporting a 4.7-inch screen with a 1280 x 720 resolution, the Moto X is the newest challenger in a category...

Oracle v. Google trial reveals renders of original Google phone design

Oracle v. Google trial reveals renders of original Google phone design

Not all the news coming out of Judge Alsup's courtroom concerns IP infringement and dollar signs, as some renders of a never-before-seen Google phone have made their way out of the courtroom and onto the web. It appears that before the T-Mobile G1 came to be, Google had its heart set on a portrait QWERTY design for its initial Android offering -- and different from what was found in the first Android emulator. Evidently, it was slated to pack at least a 200MHz chip, 64MB of RAM and ROM, a miniSD card, 2-megapixel camera with a dedicated shutter button and a non-touch-enabled QVGA display. That's a far cry from modern smartphones, but this thing was set to be sold five years ago, so such meager specs are to be expected. Intrigued? More pictures and details can be found at the source below.

Oracle v. Google trial reveals renders of original Google phone design originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 25 Apr 2012 15:05:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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