Just a few months ago since Google announced the Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich (ICS) new, the technology giant is reportedly already thinking to launch Android 5.0 with dialing codes Jelly Bean (JB). Proclaimed Softpedia, Thursday (16/02/2012), due to the fact that the ICS does not produce the expected success of Google, the company has decided to accelerate the development of Android 5.0 Jelly Bean, in order to release early in the second quarter of 2012. According to Digitimes, JB release a tablet's operating system is optimized as an attempt to block the technology giant competition is happening. Another reason that forced Google to come out with something new in no time was the fact that Microsoft will launch Windows 8 this summer. Besides the fact that Android 5.0 will be fully optimized for the tablet PC, a rumor has it that Google Chrome will integrate the system in such a way that the user can perform the dual-boot of Windows 8. This means that the vendor will be able to choose whether to adopt the only course or adding JB JB into his Windows 8 devices. More importantly, users who choose a dual-boot will be able to change their operating system without shutting off the device. The big news with Jelly Bean is that it might be coming to Motorola's "WebTop" platform. If you don't know what that is, perhaps you've heard of the Motorola Atrix phone. It allows users to dock the phone into a special laptop attachment, and the phone essentially becomes the motherboard for the laptop. The phone-powered laptop uses a proprietary Motorola interface, which it has called WebTop, but it may opt to use the Jelly Bean interface for the future of these laptop-enabled smartphones. We still don't know much about Jelly Bean, also known as Android 5.0, but it may be coming out sooner than expected, even though there have been problems with the Android 4.0 rollout process. Both the Nexus S phone and the Transformer Prime tablet issued upgrades, only to have users complain that their device started freezing or crashing uncontrollably. As a result, manufacturers have become increasingly tepid about their ICS rollout plans. Motorola announced this week that it would not be updating most of its devices until the second quarter of 2012.
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