It isn't hyperbole. Like Tivo, Android can only be installed on hardware from manufacturers that are hostile to unofficial software. Most handset manufacturers go out of their way to make installing unofficial builds difficult. They all void your warranty if you try.
The fact is that there are no Android forks worthy of the name and never will be so long as hacking is required to install it. Open-source software that can never be installed is only 'open' in the most technical sense.
So put your money where your mouth is and buy from those who don't do that. You have that possibility with Android: Nexus One.
> The fact is that there are no Android forks worthy of the name and never will be so long as hacking is required to install it
I installed Linux for the first time in 1996, downloading a bunch of Slackware floppies over a 28.8 modem (IIRC), and it certainly took some hacking to install. Granted, the vast majority of people out there aren't like that, but it's kind of odd on a site called 'hacker news' to see people who seem oblivious to the hacker spirit, and what a group of motivated people can accomplish, given time.
The reason there are no (visible - I'm sure there are a few minor ones out there) forks of Android is because Google is doing a decent job, and mostly racing ahead of where forkers would be going on their own.
"The Nexus One is available for sale in the US to registered developers" - and my guess is that that's not a particularly high barrier to entry.
Also, being in Italy, it gives me a "buy from vodaphone" link. Unlocked phones are much more common here in Europe, so apparently they're still selling them here: https://offerte.vodafone.it/nexus-one/
i) There's a difference between it being utterly impossible to modify the software on the system, as in the case of TiVo, and "manufacturers [being] hostile to unofficial software". There is no shortage of Android devices that do allow you to run your own software on the system.
ii) TiVo was only compelled to release the modified kernel and a few GNU utilities that they shipped on the system, and that's exactly what they released. Can you download the source for the TiVo software itself? Here's a hint: the answer is "no". How much of the Android source beyond the modified kernel and GNU utilities is available? Oh, all of it.
The fact is that there are no Android forks worthy of the name and never will be so long as hacking is required to install it. Open-source software that can never be installed is only 'open' in the most technical sense.