Google Inc will debut Android through mobile carrier T-Mobile in New York on Tuesday. Phone maker HTC compares the new smartphone to Apple Inc's iPhone. Features include a touch screen, slide-out keyword, trackball, built-in GPS and Google's new Chrome Web browser.
By: Sara Smith
Published: Sep 22, 2008
Updated: Jul 2, 2009

Google Inc is set to debut Android in New York on Tuesday. Android is Google's open source operating system for mobile phones. T-Mobile will be the first carrier to use Android.
"The Android platform is a newly developed, open source environment that is in its infancy, and Telecom will closely monitor its uptake and stability with customers before we launch devices," Telecom spokeswoman Rebecca Earl said in a statement.
HTC's new Dream handset will include features that Apple Inc's iPhone doesn't have. One feature is the ability to cut and paste text in e-mails. The smartphone is expected to combine features of the iPhone and the BlackBerry.
The Dream will let developers distribute new add-on applications available from the Android Market. The Android Market is similar to the Apple App Store. Other features include a touch screen, slide-out keyboard, a trackball, built-in GPS and will support Google's recently released Chrome web browser.
The G1 (Google 1 Phone) is expected to go on sale in October. It is expected to cost about $199.
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