Software architect working in Symbian/S60 area since 2000 and still being enthusiastic about mobility. Please visit my introduction page on Forum Nokia Champions web page.
tote_b5 | 22 May, 2008 10:37
It seems it's time for another round to discuss about whether Nokia
will abandon Symbian OS in favour of (mobile) Linux. All About Symbian
has reported that "Nokia's Chief Financial Officer said Nokia is considering manufacturing Linux-based mobile phones". This information is confirmed by Unwired View as well, although in a slightly different tone: they say "Nokia sees increasing role of Linux in handsets". Finally, El Reg is saying that "Nokia says no plan to switch phones to Linux".
Who to believe? Having read the comments carefully, people seems to have the following opinions/see the following options:
- The biggest haters of Symbian say that it's natural that Linux will take over and this is exactly what they've always claimed.
- According to a bit more careful opinion, these two mobile operating systems will co-exist. There are couple of arguments for this scenario:
- Symbian/S60 is undoubtedly the leader in smartphone market
- There's
room for both OSes: Symbian excels in high-performance mobile phones,
whereas Linux could be successful in mid-range feature phones.
- Nokia
has already heavily invested in the development of a mobile OS and is a
nearly 50% shareholder of Symbian these days - why would they ruin all
this?
- The development of a smartphone running on Linux still takes a LOT of time.
- Some more paranoid commenters say that "Linux is not really a threat for Symbian, but rather a motivation"
to work & perform even better in today's extremely competing
environment (i.e. mobile OSes and smartphone market). They believe that
Nokia wants to make pressure on Symbian by announcing new Linux-powered
devices from time to time.
- Finally, there are those who don't give a sh.t to what OS is running on a phone,
they "just" want their Flash/Python/Java/etc. applications (whether
they wrote them or not) to run smoothly in the future, too. Some of
these people also mention that it's the same if the OS gets replaced,
the UI (i.e. S60) is what's important - and if it remains, nothing will
change actually.
Personally, I think that Nokia is
still making experiments with Linux. Don't forget that they
already have mobile Linux devices (Internet tablets running on
Maemo
platform), though, those are not mobile phones, just sort of PDAs. In
today's fragmented mobile Linux market, no one mobile manufacturers
dare to commit themselves to take Linux as the leading operating system
for their products - it would simply be way too
risky.
It's been also said numerous times that there are lots of factors that
manufacturers must consider when selecting a mobile OS and Linux is
definitely
NOT the ultimate solution today. Nokia might abandon Symbian in the future, however, it's not time for that. Yet.
Original from mobile-thoughts.blogspot.com.
Any thoughts?
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Linux for the high end
Sorcery-ltd | 22/05/2008, 16:26
Hi,
I'd only really disagree with one major point from the most likely option - co-existence (at least for the next few years) - I would think Linux is more likely to be seen at the high end than the mid-range. Generally a system running Linux requires more resources than one running Symbian. In fact pushing down into the mid-range is very much what a lot of the recent and near future additions to Symbian have been about.
The Internet tablets run almost the same hardware as the highest end Symbian phones, and they clock the processor a little faster too.
Mark