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Home / News / Cyanogen reveals plan to release Android phone without Google services

Cyanogen reveals plan to release Android phone without Google services

With a manufacturing partner and a patchwork of replacement apps, can it really make this happen?

About 50 million devices worldwide run CyanogenMod (including the OnePlus One), an aftermarket version of Android, but the OS still relies on Google services. Cyanogen’s dependence on Google will begin to erode soon, however, as the company plans to release a device without the tech giant’s touch on it.

Cyanogen just raised an additional US$80 million (about £54 million) to continue nipping away at Google’s control over the Android ecosystem – however, Microsoft wasn’t part of the funding round, contrary to a previous report – which values the company at nearly US$1 billion (about £674 million). And its next big project is a co-branded CyanogenMod phone without Google apps and services attached.

The partner in question is Blu, a company that has enjoyed popularity in Latin America and is making inroads in the United States by selling cheap, unlocked Android devices directly to consumers. Blu intends to release the first Cyanogen phone later this year that will shed the familiar Google stamp. Of course, that means dropping essential elements like Maps, Now, and Chrome – and perhaps most pressingly, the Play Store.

But Blu CEO Samuel Ohev-Zion claims that the companies will be able to get around any issues using replacements like the Amazon Appstore, Opera, Nokia Here, Bing, and the upcoming Android version of Microsoft’s Cortana. “When these other apps are deeply integrated into the phone, most of the time they perform better than the Google apps,” he claims.

Most of Blu’s offerings are rebranded international phones with low-end specs, so it remains to be seen just how powerful of a device the Cyanogen phone is – and whether Google might try to exude some pressure on Blu to abandon the plan and keep making traditional Android phones.

However it turns out, Cyanogen’s CEO can’t stop making bold claims about its future. “We’re putting a bullet through Google’s head,” says Kirt McMaster in the large Forbes company profile that generated this news. Ambitious, indeed – now let’s see the phone that’ll help make it happen.

[Source: Forbes via Android Authority]

Profile image of Andrew Hayward Andrew Hayward Freelance Writer

About

Andrew writes features, news stories, reviews, and other pieces, often when the UK home team is off-duty or asleep. I'm based in Chicago with my lovely wife, amazing son, and silly cats, and my writing about games, gadgets, esports, apps, and plenty more has appeared in more than 75 publications since 2006.

Areas of expertise

Video games, gadgets, apps, smart home