vina wrote:
it seems that Nokia Symbion is sort of losing out, coz Nokia itself is unclear. Now Qualcomm wants to make /has made Brew Open source as well. Very two bit phone manufacturer is going to use the apps and platform route to differentiate themselves.
Symbian for some of the reasons above is struggling to move from pure cellphone to portable computer type functionality. Its technical advantages are becoming its cause for failure now. NOK itself has been quite complacent - just look at the N97!
Another interesting piece I head is that Nokia and Qualcomm are porting Symbian for Qualcomm chipsets! .Must be a big comedown for Nokia which steadfastly refused to use Qualcomm earlier.
Target is mainly Snapdragon....perhaps hedging its bets wrt OMAP?
Android, everyone seems gung ho about. See it as one nice big opportunity to unseat Mickeysoft. Actually, think about it. Same OS (largely) in the phone and computer. Just economies of scale are massive, especially , if the apps can be cross leveraged with just the UI being different in terms of biz possibilities.
Exactly the point I was making. Also note that the phone and computer are converging so in a few years there may not be a differentiator. Instead of a computer on every desk, you might just have a tiny docking station on every desk with actual computer in your pocket. HW wise it is a cinch to pull it off - SW is the key and that is where Android is kinda leading for now. It might be easier for Maemo to move into this space rather than Symbian with all its baggage of legacy code and design.
But to unseat Mickeysoft, Google needs to convince ppl. to let go off IE, MS Office, Outlook and atleast provide a non-Linuxy full GUI similar to XP to allow ppl. to shift smoothly. Google is trying to be the Mickeysoft of the next generation PCs in a way - can they pull it off? Only time will tell. What I do see happening is a lot more ganging up against the NOK elephant which in the past has been the 1-stop shop for device hw and sw - lot of massa foreign policy type tactics at play here. For NOK, main focus should be to revamp its user facing technologies (touch, UI, apps) and break in the NA market which is small but sets the me-too trends. HW wise and tech features wise NOK is still way ahead but nowadays users care more about L&F than raw tech specs. Ofcourse what would be great if they can come up with the next big thing in services (and not necessarily devices), this will require them to break out of their conventional European staid thinking.