For most people – for good reason – the first smartphone is the iPhone, because there was no widely produced and sold smartphone before. Although trials were made in the 1990s, the market did not move until the iPhone came along. However, about a year later, the real revolution in the smartphone world took place: Android.
The first Android phone was announced in September 2008 and went on sale on October 22. In addition to the iPhone, BlackBerry was also blowing in the market. By the way, the biggest reason for the iPhone wind was that the phone was not offered for sale exclusively to the AT&T operator.
Following AT&T’s acquisition of the iPhone, US carrier T-Mobile also signed with HTC and released the first Android phone called the G1:
T-Mobile G1, manufactured by HTC, had a 3.2-inch 320×480 screen. The RAM of the device, which uses Qualcomm’s MSM7201A chip on the processor side, was 192 MB.
The storage capacity of the phone was 256 MB. There was also a microSD slot on the device, which some today’s phones do not have:
Android reached 2.7 billion users in 14 years:
Proving itself in performance with ultra-fast flagship devices such as the Samsung Galaxy Note9, Android has also been made accessible to everyone within the scope of projects such as Android One.
The Android ecosystem, which started with the T-Mobile G1, has already become one of Google’s most successful projects. The Android world, which has become a real ‘ecosystem’ with different systems such as Chromebook, Chromecast and Wear OS, owes its current position to T-Mobile G1.