Even if all of the above is true and Google was also political, that doesn't prove that Microsoft is not political, which is Rubin's point.
Also, Google saw a landscape of proprietary platforms, and created a free open source platform and gave it away. That was something new. MS is just adding another proprietary platform.
How is it "political" to simply release a new version of your platform, in a space you've been consistently releasing operating systems in for the last 14 years? I will repeat...yet again...the company that broke their mold in the mobile world is Google, not Microsoft.
Windows Mobile was not open source, but it was about as open of a platform as possible. Other than the kernel itself, you can swap out just about anything you want with your own custom software. As for "giving it away" vs licensing, well, Google still holds the keys to gmail and the Android market, so they maintain plenty of power over Android if they choose - like they did with Skyhook.
Because I never said they should give up on it. If they want to reinvent the bicycle and create another proprietary OS, fine, but there is no technical reason to do so, and fairly dubious business reasons. Google is not stopping MS from making an Android clone that has all Bing instead of all Google on it, and milking it for search revenue.
Again, though, there is no reason for them to do that. They're an OS company. They have their own OS. They've had their own mobile OS for years. There's no reason for them to give up on it in favor of a custom version of Android.
Also - how do you know Google would let them into the Android ecosystem? The OS is free, but access to the Market is solely at Google's discretion. What makes you think that even if Microsoft inexplicably wanted to, that Google would let them in all the way?
If having your own platform is so obvious for the highest profit potential, Nokia and Palm are just swimming in dough.
It is not as slam dunk business decision as you claim. The business side is that the profits and revenue come from search and advertising. Nothing is stopping MS from taking open source Android, replacing all the Google search and advertising with its own, and milking it for all the profit while Google has to eat all most of the development costs.
For your first comment, you're either willfully twisting my words (aka, trolling) or you just don't understand the meaning of the word "potential". The highest potential is there when you control the platform. That doesn't mean every company that tries it will succeed, don't even attempt to twist my words into that. I already responded to your second part here. There is both no reason for Microsoft to do that, nor is there any evidence that Google would let "Microdroid" into the Android ecosystem.
That is your opinion, how are his comments sour grapes when Android is destroying MS efforts in mobile space? More like WP7 is Microsoft's sour grapes against Android. I have a Zune HD, and it's fine, but there is nothing there that MS couldn't have done by just taking Android source code and adding their own browser and interface. Then I would have the same experience, except would be able to run Android apps and have multitasking. So as a user, there are no technical reasons to have a new platform, just the opposite. It's just Microsoft's political reasons to have their own proprietary platform where they call the shots.
There's nothing that stopped Google from doing that before Android, either. I have to repeat....again....that Rubin's comments apply to 2008 Google a whole lot more than 2010 Microsoft.
No one - including you - thinks Microsoft would make the very political decision to abandon the OS game and move to software only on other platforms. Nobody. You might want them to, because you want Android to be on top, but you, nor Rubin, nor anyone thinks that's what they'd do. They are doing what they've been doing for a very long time now, making Rubin's comments misplaced.
Look, this is just repeating itself over and over again, and frankly no one else in this thread seems to agree with you, so unless you have something new to say, I'm going to excuse myself from this discussion.