It's only been about two years since Linux started becoming a significant factor in mobile phones, an arena that has been dominated by Symbian, Microsoft, and proprietary operating systems. With the burgeoning complexity of mobile phones, feature phones, and smart phones -- plus increasing time-to-market pressures -- there's a clear movement toward off-the-shelf, third-party operating systems based on industry standards, and Linux figures to be a major beneficiary of that trend.
Linux is doomed to gain more share as even major players like Nokia and PalmOne will have a hard to compete with their OS in terms of features and complexity... not everyone can build an OS nowadays.
Grundig B700
Gupp Phreedom
On the one hand, it's an ugly wedge of technology. On the other hand, it might be the wonderful Sharp Zaurus' GSM-enabled spiritual sequel. Gupp Technologies' Phreedom smartphone will be out this summer, offering VoIP calling in addition to GSM, 2.5" screen, WiFi, push email, 320 MB memory and a 312MHz PXA270 CPU.
Greenphone
FIC Neo1973
D-Link V-Click
Moto "MING" A1200
Haier (China) recently showcased their new good looking N60 smartphone operating on Access Linux Platform. The Haier N60 features a SDIO expansion card slot, a swiveling 240×320 touch screen with 262k colors, a 400-Mhz processor, built-in MP3 and MPEG4 players, built-in 59MB memory, a Li-Ion batter providing up to 180 minutes talk time and 200 hours standby time, a 1.3-megapixel camera, as well as Infrared and USB connectivity (no Bluetooth, which is a downside).
This tri-band GSM phone measures 48×25 x 94 mm and weighs 131 grams.
ImCoSys Linux Smartphone
TI OMAP 730 processor
Quad band GSM support
GPRS support
WiFi and USB support
64MB Flash, 64MB SDRAM
SD slot
240 x 320 transflective TFT screen
Touch screen
GPS module
Measures 125 x 64 x 18 mm
40 polyphonic MIDI sounds
Uses embedded Linux Supports various document formats.
What has Linux to do with cellphones ?
Linux is likely to have a very bright future in the mobile phone industry specifically, the class of mobile phones that are considered smart phones. Motorola currently holds the torch for Linux on mobile phones in the U.S. market and has developed a unique platform called Moto Juix for its high functionality phones that is based on a melding of Java and Linux technologies.
Linux is collectively created by a large group of open-source programmers, many of whom work for companies such as IBM and Hewlett-Packard that sell hundreds of millions of dollars worth of high-end server computers running the Unix-like operating system. Now, though, several companies are advocating use of Linux in smaller devices.
What Motorola articulated is the future for their high-end handset lineup is Linux, said Yankee Group wireless technologies analyst John Jackson. This is a pretty interesting statement from a company with the size, scope and market of Motorola. The operating system isn't that interesting. It's coupling Linux and Java together, The company hasn't changed its strategy of encouraging the use of Java for programmers who write cell phone software such as games or business applications.
Although they will be pioneers in Linux cell phones, the fact that application is written in Java leaves them reasonably insulated from the underlying operating system.
What do u think about the future of Linux cell phones ?
1 comment:
hehe... i am still using my Sumsung old phone
:)
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