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Re: Symbian and N-Gage on Tablets
c'mon all Symbian fanatics.
Symbian is ok for a phone but even on my E51 I get frustrated with it's connectivity abilities. All applications asking for selecting way to connect even if there is connection alive. S60 was ok on my n3650 and it filled it's capabilities but with more advanced device - equipped in many connectivity interfaces it FAILS imho. I don't like it's way of setting up connections and all other stuff. Maemo - once you know how it's done on PC - you know what you should do. On symbian it's the different story. I'm impressed why nokia pushes this OS for new phones. They should forget it and modify their Maemo a bit - it would be much better. Make it look like an s60 at it will easily replace. |
Re: Symbian and N-Gage on Tablets
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When I have a completely different opinion about something it usually mean there is at least 1 completely different point of view I can't see :) @XTC Quote:
By my side is just all about knowdledge and having the opportunities to touch by hand, developing, hack another toy (and reading around how much Nokia payed for symbian, an expansive toy :) ) just fit my needs. I guess is the same for Android, watching how a company like Google build from scratch and entire os and understand better why some choices and why not other have, I repeat to me, great appeal. My initial tought was that porting symbian on the tablets would be pretty easy and cheap for Nokia and seemd fit with the edgy personality of the series. I think the sentence: Quote:
Peace and love, peace and love |
Could Symbian be used on Maemo hardware, and vice versa?
The Symbian OS is going open source under EPL with the first full open release in mid-2010, and the first community-supervised (i.e. maemo-esque) open source release by the end of 2010, with all versions after that being overseen entirely by the Symbian Foundation.
(Click here for more details on the upcoming new releases from the Symbian Foundation.) As it's going to be freely available, does anyone have any idea if this upcoming versions of Symbian could be installed to run on Maemo devices? Obviously we will probably have brand new hardware by then, but we already know a bit about it so perhaps some intelligent guesswork can be made? There's no requirement for it to be a phone-only OS, the foundation is actively reaching out to non-phone devices too and have demonstrated Symbian running on an Intel Atom setup to prove the point. |
Re: Could Symbian be used on Maemo hardware, and vice versa?
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EDIT: "Symbian and N-Gage on Tablets" is another previous thread. |
Re: Could Symbian be used on Maemo hardware, and vice versa?
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Re: Could Symbian be used on Maemo hardware, and vice versa?
It could be used, but like S60v5, there would need to be considerable work done with the UI and many applications in order to maintain compatibility.
S60v5 would be the best canidate for MID-like use, and I wouldn't be surprised if that was already done internally by Nokia. |
Re: Symbian and N-Gage on Tablets
Symbian if its open sourced in a timely manner, will probably be the most advanced open OS for mobile devices available. It has developer documentation and support as well as a framework for EVERYTHING, voip, calendar, multitasking, gps, HD video, most forms of cellular data, advanced gaming, WM Playsforsure (I dunno if that will be included in the spec due to licensing etc) and most importantly a strong regular phone and dialling component.
It will be mighty tempting for manufacturers who want to put out a do everything multimedia device who right now only really have the Android OS available. See Sony Idou As far as a port to the tablet hardware I highly doubt Nokia is going to do that for many different business decisions. |
Re: Symbian and N-Gage on Tablets
We should probably be careful not to confuse Symbian with S60.
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Re: Run Symbian on Maemo devices?
The following threads have been merged to form this thread:
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