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2009-10-01
, 19:57
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Posts: 3,397 |
Thanked: 1,212 times |
Joined on Jul 2008
@ Netherlands
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#2
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LiMo is developed by the LiMo Foundation (founded by a group of cellular handset makers and network operators) for handheld devices, and is based on the Linux operating system.[1] It has a modular plug-in architecture, and supports DRM. LiMo application developers will be able to use SDKs to write managed code running in a Java virtual machine, browser apps for WebKit, and native code.
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2009-10-01
, 20:09
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Posts: 1,213 |
Thanked: 356 times |
Joined on Jan 2008
@ California and Virginia
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#3
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2009-10-01
, 23:43
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Posts: 3,397 |
Thanked: 1,212 times |
Joined on Jul 2008
@ Netherlands
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#4
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Android and Maemo are MUCH MUCH more open source than it.
Basically, all the phone companies are lazy, so they came together to make a open-source kernel and middleware to run their platform on. Like TiVo, Archos, and other companies that use Linux, the platform itself is locked down with proprietary interfaces and the like, so its harder to hack in that sense.
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2009-10-02
, 00:32
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Posts: 5,478 |
Thanked: 5,222 times |
Joined on Jan 2006
@ St. Petersburg, FL
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#5
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I'm not claiming I know it all but there deserves to be a more detailed answer to the question how much of LiMo is proprietary, and which parts exactly.
Maemo is also a Linux based OS but can you compare LiMo with Maemo 5 and run the same software ?
Or must I see LiMo more like Android , running on the Linux kernel and managed code java language.