Jelly Bean spreads the butter to Amazon’s Kindle Fire in unofficial beta build (video)

Jelly Bean(s) for everyone — essentially, that’s just what Google’s done for the tech savvy underground with 4.1.1’s release in AOSP. Not two days after that source code was made available, has a developer by the name of Hashcode worked to get an early build up and running on Amazon’s Kindle Fire. If you’ll remember, that Bezos-backed slate runs a heavily customized UX with Gingerbread buried deep at its core and official plans for a software update beyond its 2.3 underpinnings have not been announced. So, for adventurous owners that are sick of living in the software-past, but aren’t quite ready to part ways with 200 bills for that very now Nexus 7, a beta ROM is at the ready. Naturally, you’ll need to have your device rooted and loaded with a custom recovery to get things going but, take note, this work-in-progress is far from complete: hardware video acceleration isn’t yet supported and WiFi is somewhat unstable. Fixes are assuredly on the way, so the less carefree might want to abstain from flashing at the moment. For everyone else, you can find the necessary downloads at the source below and, while you’re at it, check out the video tour after the break.

Update: Looks like the crew got Google’s apps (Play Store, Gmail, etc.) working as well as WiFi. Check out the updated tour video here.

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Jelly Bean spreads the butter to Amazon’s Kindle Fire in unofficial beta build (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 11 Jul 2012 12:45:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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via Engadget http://engt.co/N3ptUv

The War Between Google, Amazon, Facebook, Apple

fastcompany:

Check out interview highlights with Farhad Manjoo on toady’s NPR Fresh Air where they talk about the great tech war or 2012.

In the old days, Amazon sold books, Google was a search engine, Facebook was a social network and Apple sold computers.

But that’s not the case anymore.

Google and Apple now sell phones. Amazon has gotten into the server business. Apple sells music. Facebook and Amazon provide online payment services. And that’s just the beginning.

(via fastcompany)