Cyanogen

Microsoft moves in on Android distro Cyanogen OS

Life
Cyanogen is a fork of the Android mobile OS

30 January 2015

Microsoft has invested in Cyanogen, producer of an alternative distribution of Android, according to a Wall Street Journal article published Thursday.

Cyanogen is the principal backer of the popular, open source CyanogenMod distribution of the Android operating system, which is used in the OnePlus One smartphone. The company also makes Cyanogen OS, a commercial Android distribution found in smartphones built in India by Micromax, including new models selling under the brand name YU. On its site, the company touts the OS as being “known for its revolutionary personalisation features, intuitive interface, speed, improved battery life, and enhanced security.”

The Journal cited unnamed sources familiar with the transaction. It did not provide comment from either Microsoft or Cyanogen. Cyanogen did not respond to IDG News Service’s request for comment by press time, and Microsoft declined to comment. Microsoft would be a minority investor in a roughly $70 million round of financing, the Journal reported.

News that Cyanogen was seeking a new round of financing, and that Microsoft officials had met with the company, was first reported last August by The Information. That article referred to Cyanogen as an “obscure Android software firm”.

Since that time, Cyanogen’s outspoken CEO, Kirt McMaster, has done everything he could to prove the first word in that headline inaccurate. At a developer event in San Francisco last week, McMaster was widely quoted as having announced to attendees: “We’re attempting to take Android away from Google.”

McMaster explained his pronouncement by saying Android should return to the principles on which it was founded, including independence from single-vendor control as well as from any one company’s suite of apps.

CyanogenMod reportedly exceeded 1 million active users worldwide at the start of 2012, and by the end of the following year claimed 10 million. It’s not market share that makes the company or its open source contributors compelling, but rather Cyanogen’s bold effort to enable smartphone manufacturers to deploy Android without having to rely upon Google-branded resources such as Google Play.

It’s uncertain what Microsoft may gain from such a deal. But Cyanogen enthusiasts have shared their theories since rumours of a deal first spread. Some say Microsoft could benefit by either collaborating with some of Cyanogen’s talented programmers or hiring them, and thus benefitting without having to absorb the company outright. One other theory has Microsoft building its own cross-platform apps store, giving the Microsoft brand a beachhead in a territory otherwise dominated by Google.

IDG News Service

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