Wind River, an embedded systems company that is owned by Intel, has bundled its collection of custom Android frameworks and platform enhancements into modules that can be commercially licensed by Android device makers. There are presently three modules: user experience, connectivity, and medical.

The user experience module includes an implementation of an Android windowing system, which offers a more desktop-like approach to multitasking with overlapping windows. Such functionality could be useful on devices with larger form factors or more precise input mechanisms.

The user experience module also includes a "hyper boot" improvement that reduces Android boot time. The connectivity module includes DLNA and SyncML frameworks, which can be used to enhance synchronization functionality and add media streaming support to the Android platform. The medical module includes an implementation of the Bluetooth Health Device Protocol and frameworks for interoperating with medical equipment. Wind River says that the components in its modules represent Android expertise that the company accumulated while providing Android-related services to partners like Clarion and Fujitsu.