Ron is a comment editor of Ars Technica specializing in Android OS and Google products. He is always looking for new gadgets and likes to separate things to see how they work. Previously Ron was an editor of Android Police and has about 8 years of IT experience. He likes repair, and he seems to be constantly developing new projects.
An interesting case study is the relationship with Google and an open source mobile operating system based on Android, a variant of the Linux kernel. While writing about Google's attempt to dominate the Android operating system, Ron Amadeo explained that the relationship "appears but does not touch" for Android. (AOSP) open part and the closed source code section of all Google brand applications. Google will never fully try to shut down Android completely, but the company seems to make every effort to utilize existing open source projects. The company's main approach is to introduce more and more applications under closed source 'Google'.
If so, even if you count only the enthusiasm of the Wall Street Journal, that is a success. At Ars Technica, Ron Amadeo explained about WSJ's work and speculated about other Google X projects, including Google Glass and automated driving vehicles. The Google X brand aroused strong demand for Otaku journalists. This week, Night Science Journalism Tracker Paul Rayburn found an article on Morning Mix's Morning Mix. This is a link, but I do not know if this article is open access. It outlines Duo's adventure by revealing scientific bad behavior. Rayburn pointed out that other science journalists have enough material for their follow-up interviews.
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