"We feel OS innovation has stagnated or stalled," said Vikram Natarajan, Cyanogen's SVP of global partnerships. "Apps have been stuck for a long time." The idea with MOD, then, is to move far beyond what apps are capable of. Even on Android, which is far less restrictive than iOS, there are portions of the OS that normals apps simple can't touch, like the aforementioned dialer or certain parts of the Android lock screen. Naturally, the company launched all new APIs to get developers onboard, and it also announced the MOD Ready Program, which helps phone makers and carriers to create their own mods.
You wouldn't be blamed for viewing this whole announcement as an ideal Trojan horse for bringing Microsoft's services to Android. While the MOD platform will be open to all developers, the Redmond software giant is essentially Cyanogen's launch partner for the whole endeavor. Microsoft has also created a mod that lets you quickly jot something down in OneNote when you're on a call, while another brings in its Hyperlapse functionality to stitch together images smoothly. Other launch entries include a mod from Truecaller, which uses a spam list to keep unwanted text messages at bay, as well as one that puts your social media messages on your lock screen. Mods could eventually let you play a mobile game from your lock screen, Natarajan said.
While there are a few hardware companies already onboard with Cyanogen's MOD plan, the company won't be announcing them until later this week. Cyanogen might be onto something — there are plenty of developers who'd love to take advantage of other portions of Android. But it'll also need to prove to developers why they should spend time creating something that can only be used on devices running its specialized version of Android.
Cyanogen says the MOD platform will arrive next month on devices running Cyanogen OS 13.0 or newer, and developers can jump into the MOD Ready Platform starting today.