Actually, I think that's good.
As Android grows, Foreflight's absence will increase others' motivation to develop for Android because the market is not (yet, at least) dominated by a single app like Foreflight dominates in the iThings market. We'll have more things to choose from.
I am especially hoping that Hilton shows up in force, as he is committed to open interfaces rather than to proprietary boxes like the Stratus and the GDL-39. Again, more things to choose from.
For me, Garmin Pilot is a holding pattern while I wait for something better to show up. I love their TSOed boxes but I think they have too much marketing and hardware baggage to be the winner in the tablet market.
It's funny how picky we've become.
My first decent, true aviation GPS was the amazing AvMap. It was beautiful, innovative, and -- had it not been owned by ignoramuses -- would have easily come to dominate the aviation market.
Sadly, despite years of promises, weather came too late for them to compete. I finally bought a 496, and sold the AvMap.
By every measure except one -- weather -- the Garmin 496 was a HUGE step down from AvMap. It was smaller, slower, and had a horrible user interface. But, on-board weather trumped all, so I suffered with Garmin's dinky screen and awkwardly slow screen refresh rates.
Meanwhile, we had acquired a Lowrance 2000c, which moved over to the pilot's yoke after we panel-docked the 496. This was a nice GPS, but Lowrance orphaned it...
Now, the Nexus 7, running Garmin Pilot (and other apps) has FINALLY given me a display as good as my old AvMap, with free weather and (some) traffic. It is in every way superior to every GPS I've owned, and cost NOTHING by comparison.
Yet, all we do is ***** about it.
I think Garmin is 95% there with the Pilot app. Still as with any project, that last 5% takes half your time.