Google’s first Android smartphone was unveiled on September 23, 2008, with T-Mobile (TMUS). The telephone, known as the G1, looks like an oddity now. It had a bulky body, a slide-out keyboard, and a BlackBerry-style trackball to touch the display screen.

Yet, this tool formally kicked off the fiercest tech competition of the century. By early 2011, Android’s operating system had become the most popular phone platform in the U.S. — and Apple (AAPL, Tech30) CEO Steve Jobs had declared a “thermonuclear battle” against Android.
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Apple created the modern telephone as we realize it. However, Android went on to dominate the marketplace through several partnerships with carriers and decreased costs. In the primary zone of this year, a mind-blowing 86% of smartphones sold internationally ran on Android, in line with records from Gartner. Android’s dominance is all the greater, considering the team was caught off guard by the iPhone launch.
“Google and Apple were working on developing the cell phone at the same time,” says Fred Vogelstein, writer of Dogfight: How Apple and Google Went to War and Started a Revolution. Google had acquired Android, then a small startup, in 2005 to gain a more potent footing on mobile devices. In 2006, Google’s Android team labored on designing its own software program and a telephone that looked like a BlackBerry. Then Jobs unveiled a significant one-of-a-kind device on stage in January 2007. The head of Android, Andy Rubin, was in a car while the presentation kicked off. He requested the driving force to drag over to look at it online, consistent with Dogfight.

