Google has announced its next version of Android, version
4.4, and it's not called Key Lime Pie. It's KitKat.
That's right, Google entered into a deal with Nestle in an
announcement made on android.com/kitkat which includes several links to Nestle’s
KitKat website and a sponsorship promotion, where lucky Android/chocolate fans have the
chance to win a Nexus 7 if they buy KitKats.
Everyone had previously been referring to the next version
of Android as Key Lime Pie for well over a year now, but it seems Google is
moving away from non-branded sweets in exchange for some delicious corporate
dollars.
In a move that would make even MC Hammer cringe, Google
today unveiled the latest dessert-themed name for its next version of Android
(version 4.4). What’s it called? Android KitKat. Yep, Google has sold out the
code name to its next operating system, once thought to be called Android ‘Key
Lime Pie.’ The new version of Android, which now has a mascot made of KitKat
bars, was announced on android.com/kitkat,
with several links to Nestle’s KitKat website and a sponsorship promotion
giving people the chance to win a Nexus 7 if they buy a bunch of KitKats. Previous
versions of Android have been code-named Cupcake, Donut, Eclair, Froyo,
Gingerbread, Honeycomb, Ice Cream Sandwich, and Jelly Bean.KitKats taste great,
but this is a sad move. Google executives claim that no money exchanged hands,
but this is a clear ploy to force fans and media websites to write and say
“Android KitKat” every time they mention the next version of Google’s OS.
Nestle, for its part, plans to milk the hell out of this promotion. It will
sell 50 million Android-branded KitKats in 19 countries around the world,
including the UK, US, India, Brazil, Russia, and Japan.
Google has gotten a lot of praise for making Android an
open-source project, but it’s hard not to be a little let down if it’s now
willing to sell out the name of its operating systems. What’s next? Will new
Nexus 7 devices come in “Hershey’s” Brown? Maybe there will be an educational
version of the Nexus called the Lexis Nexus? What isn’t up for sale at Google?
Executives at Google have kept the KitKat name a secret
since Mobile World Congress this year, lying about the name of Android 4.4 to
keep the element of “surprise” intact. Executives at Google have kept the
KitKat name a secret since Mobile World Congress this year, lying about the
name of Android 4.4 to keep the element of “surprise” intact.
“We kept calling the name Key Lime Pie internally and even
when we referred to it with partners,” said John Lagerling, director of Android
global partnerships, to the BBC. ”If we had said, ‘The K release is, by the
way, secret’, then people would have racked their minds trying to work out what
it was going to be.”
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