Android Demo Video, Similar To iPhone

Google has released a demo video showing some of the features of the much-awaited Android OS, and it's pretty impressive. It sports many of the features of the iPhone, as well as a few more. For one, it has the ability to be used on a device with a touch-screen, complete with a full web-browser that reacts to flicks of the finger much like the iPhone.
The operating system is Linux-based and open-source in an attempt to generate development for the system. Unlike the iPhone, developers can make applications for the device as it is without any sort of special privileges. It also allows for a maximum degree of customization, in that any part of the operating system can be modified.
The default Android shell supports several more advanced hardware features by default, including 3G network support, playback of AAC/MP3 songs and H.264/MPEG-4 video, and hardware 3D acceleration for games and 3D utilities like a street view in Google Maps. A touchscreen control system is provided from Synaptics.
Interestingly, it also sports several features characteristic of Apple and the iPhone. For instance, the full web browser that shows web pages as you would see them on a computer, a touch interface (though not Apple's "multitouch"). For that matter, much of the interface is highly reminiscent of the iPhone throughout the device.
In order to showcase their software, they have also created two prototype cell phones. One is complete with real QWERTY keyboard, and the other is prominently a touch-screen much like the iPhone.

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Android is Hot
Here I come.
Yours Truly,
Mr. A
Android has possibilities.
Incredible
iPhone has a good little jump on making it to market, but really the lack of freedom has really been irksome for us end users, (I complain, but I paraphrase Winston Churchill when I say that it's the worst phone I've ever tried except for every other phone I've ever tried from time to time). If a vendor can scratch all those little itches that iphone users want (3G, sdk/open source, video, syncing music with multiple computers, lower price point, not being locked into AT&T, using a sim from whatever country you're visiting instead of paying $6 a minute like I did in vietnam), then there are gonna be tons of people pouring over to this, a lot of the people that never even made it to the iPhone in the first place.
Whatever is the end result, I'm amazed that the cell industry has made it this far with so many unsatisfied customers. It's high time that they get shook up, and now that hardware has gotten powerful enough to bring over so many innovations from computing, the users are finally getting what they need.