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Handhelds Operating Systems Software Hardware

Nokia Taking Over Psion to Control Symbian? 144

securitas writes: "Reuters reports that Nokia is considering a takeover of Psion (mirror at Forbes), to gain control of the Symbian operating system. Psion is the second largest shareholder in Symbian with a 31.1 percent stake. Nokia holds 32.2 percent. The move is seen as a tactic to fight off Microsoft and dominate the lucrative and growing mobile phone software market. Symbian is currently owned by Ericsson, Nokia, Panasonic, Psion, Samsung Electronics, Siemens and Sony Ericsson. The report originates in the London newspaper, Business. What does this mean for the Symbian OS, which is currently an open OS?"
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Nokia Taking Over Psion to Control Symbian?

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  • Oh, Symbian (Score:3, Funny)

    by Old Uncle Bill ( 574524 ) on Sunday November 09, 2003 @09:22PM (#7431202) Journal
    Thought that said Sybian. That would be an interesting integration...
  • Please no. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Zebbers ( 134389 ) on Sunday November 09, 2003 @09:25PM (#7431207)
    I own a Nokia Symbian phone and would really hate to see this happen. Symbian is so good because it IS independent from one single phone company.

    Oh well....
    • Re:Please no. (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward
      Well I hope they don't buy out Opera and take over their Opera web browser for Symbian [opera.com]. One of the reasons Opera is so great is because it is independent.
    • Independence. (Score:3, Interesting)

      I was down in Europe this summer attending an industry conference. The impression most people down there seem to be having was that Nokia went the OSS route only to avoid accusations of being monopolistic like MS (while being Free Principles (tm)-agnostic, that is).

      This will be a good time to test that hypothesis out.

    • Re:Please no. (Score:3, Interesting)

      by nikster ( 462799 )
      Symbian is not independent - it's just "supported" by a range of mobile companies. This would be good, except that Nokia and SonyEricsson are the only ones in this alliance who openly oppose M$'s plans to take over the phone OS market.

      A takeover of Symbian wouldn't really help Nokia in this regard. Since they know that, the only good reason would be to grab the shares from uninterested Psion, and then open it up for all to use.

      The sooner the phone OS market goes to open source, the safer for the anti-M$ f
  • by Fyndlorn ( 88381 ) on Sunday November 09, 2003 @09:26PM (#7431212)
    First I thought it said 'Nokia to take over Prison control System' Which freaked me out. Then I thought it said 'Nokia to take Psionic Control of System' which freaked me out some more... phew
  • by ezh ( 707373 ) on Sunday November 09, 2003 @09:27PM (#7431215)
    or close the source since other mobile device developers would just switch to Windows CE/Embedded Linux instead.

    In a long run all proprietory systems die out, open ones survive.

    Certainly, IMHO
    • or close the source since other mobile device developers would just switch to Windows

      After bunging SCO the $$$ millions that it needed to take on Big Blue, I wouldn't put it past Micro$oft to bung Nokia a few $$$ million to do the deal to achieve just that eventuality.

      Isn't it in M$'s best interests to have every piece of OSS culled and the development trees stunted?
  • Is this a sign? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by dolo666 ( 195584 ) * on Sunday November 09, 2003 @09:28PM (#7431217) Journal
    If Nokia can stay on top of mobile phones, then they can stay on top of wireless technology as a whole (handheld=>phone integration), and compete heavy with the top dogs, then they have a shot at making it past the tech bottleneck coming in 2009. While I'm at it, I should say that this is a suspicious move from Nokia [afr.com].

    "The move is seen as a tactic to fight off Microsoft and dominate the lucrative and growing mobile phone software market."

    I see it as a parallel to the problems Palm was having [com.com] when they tried to get control of Symbian [archives.tcm.ie] in 2001. This could be a sign Nokia is in trouble [howardforums.com].

    This is also good news for shareholders in Psion, as a similar event [archives.tcm.ie] caused a jump in share price back in 2001 when Palm tried to get control of Symbian.
    • Re:Is this a sign? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by gl4ss ( 559668 ) on Sunday November 09, 2003 @09:45PM (#7431317) Homepage Journal
      you know that your 'nokia is in trouble' link goes to a story from December 10 of 2002, a story that was speculation already then? i'm sure with little googling you could have found a newer article with essentially the same innards(of course the color phones would have to be replaced with something else since they have taken off bigtime). though your another link has "Seen as the star performer of the telecom sector, Nokia registered only a 1 per cent rise in second-quarter sales, to 7.01 billion euros."

      anyways.. only thing surprising is that they(or the other companies in it) haven't bought psion out of symbian earlier. when you take a look on http://www.psion.com/ what's the phone you see? a nokia 7650. and quite frankly psion itself doesn't seem to have that much intrest in symbian(as something to be actively part of anymore), though i'm just a little out of loop what the f is psions product nowadays? poppers? one lousy email reader for symbian?
      • The Netbook Pro [slashdot.org], which is CE.net based. Yes, and they used EPOC 5 before they got out, while the cells used EPOC 6.
      • I think nokia might really be in problems. I'm not using observations from "above", but more from the "ordinary customers" in the street.

        A few years ago (holland and switzerland) almost everyone I know bought a nokia phone. They were the only sensible choice for critical and demanding consumers. Nowadays they have been completely replaced in this segment by Sony ericsson. Nokia has lost their technology and marketing advantage. SE has the lightest and smallest phones and/or with most features nowadays.
        • Re:Nokia in problems (Score:3, Informative)

          by gl4ss ( 559668 )
          well.. their market penetration has only increased(worldwide) from few years back(being at somewhere around ~40% of total market), when se only strugled for positive outcome for the first time in years(thanks to it's new phones selling ok).

          the smaller/cheaper phones between nokia and se have pretty much the same featureset anyways, but se lacks totally what nokias series60 offers(their p800 is too expensive still, while superior to series60 phones technically).

          phones are not about being smallest and light
    • tech bottleneck coming in 2009

      Is this some shit you made up yourselves, not to be outdone by the stellar predictions of Y2K and the Kohoutek Comet

  • Open System? (Score:5, Informative)

    by barnaclebarnes ( 85340 ) on Sunday November 09, 2003 @09:30PM (#7431239) Homepage
    What does this mean for the Symbian OS, which is currently an open OS?

    Symbian is NOT an open system by most free/open source followers standards. It is an OS which can be licensed just like most others. Sure you get more access to the source code and internals but you cannot redistribute with no royalties and other advantages which traditional free/open software has.

    That being said it is still a great OS for phones.

    • Is this a good sign for Qtopia? Trolltech may get some business here.
    • Re:Open System? (Score:5, Informative)

      by seebs ( 15766 ) on Sunday November 09, 2003 @11:02PM (#7431679) Homepage
      I'd call it fairly solidly non-open. When I had a Psion, Psion refused to document their file formats; they insisted that the only way to examine their data was to run code *on EPOC* which used the class interfaces to serialize and deserialize.

      As a result, programs to convert data to and from Psion PDAs were difficult to write third-party stuff.

      I liked the formfactor, I liked the idea of a real multitasking OS, but the fact is, Palm was a hell of a lot more open than Psion was, back in the day, and I don't think all that much has changed.

      To add insult to injury, the only way to develop for Psion was to use Visual C++ with a special downloaded version of gcc, for which source was unavailable for a long time. I got this, to look at it, and it took me a year to get off their spam list.

      Ugh.
      • Re:Open System? (Score:1, Informative)

        by Anonymous Coward
        That is actually due to the fact that Symbian does not use normal linear file streams. While the file structure is well-defined, even the people who wrote the application could not easily tell you what the order of the bits is the file is.

        On the other hand, most of symbian's applications do export stuff into standard formats (vcard, etc), or provide APIs to access PIM data, making it easier for 3rd parties to use.
        • If it can be produced programatically, it can be described. If there is a mechanism for an algorithmic machine to produce or read the data, it can be documented.

          At best, this comes out to the defense "but we designed it so badly that it's hard to document".

          It's still a fatal flaw, and I believe it was a major component of what killed Psion.
      • Re:Open System? (Score:5, Informative)

        by Troed ( 102527 ) on Monday November 10, 2003 @04:34AM (#7432695) Homepage Journal
        Note: I'm an ex-Symbian employee.

        The library you use to read/write the fileformats is called WINC, and is the same code that runs on Epoc but compiled for Windows. Excellent compatibility.

        From what I can remember (I started programming Epoc on the summer of -98) the source to GCC was available the whole time - even externally.

        Your mileage may vary.
        • They refused repeatedly to make the gcc source available, around '97-'99. They eventually made available a huge binary download which may well have also had modified source, but as I recall, you still needed a magic cookie that could only be used in that particular development environment. You couldn't just build a cross-compiler.

          The problem is that the WINC library is not remotely comparable to real documentation of the file format. "Compiles on windows" is not an open format. "Here is a definition of
    • Here, here! (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward
      I agree! I work with Symbian OS....not only is it a pain in the ass, but they (Nokia/Symbian) work to obscure the internals. For example, you can download an SDK with public API's, but you have to pay big $$$ to get at the unpublished API or the sources. Also, they have purposely tried to hide functionality from the user in the name of protecting the user from themself (don't belive me, try browsing the filesystem with a 3650 or try to manually configure the modems).

      IMHO, the problem is that the mobile mar
    • Additionally, Nokia already licence their "Series 30", "Series 60", "Series 90" specifications, so I don't think you can immediately assume that their purchase of Symbian would be the end of the world.
    • Good point. I don't recall reading about Symbian on the opensource.org webpage; quite possible that their licence doesn't match the standards of the Open Source Definition.

      Need to rush now, but can anyone look up the the Symbian License? Should be interesting to see if it really is Open (tm) or not.

    • Symbian is NOT an open system by most free/open source followers standards.

      I'd say Symbian is more "open" in some areas, while it is as open as MS in other areas.

      On one hand everybody is allowed to look at the source of Eikon, the GUI layer of the operating system of Psion, without paying anything. Also you can see the entire sourcecode of their built-in word processor application. OK it's not opensource, but I appreciate their generous offer.

      On the other hand, as far as any kernel-side things are concer

  • by SharpFang ( 651121 ) on Sunday November 09, 2003 @09:38PM (#7431270) Homepage Journal
    ...some intelligent geeks for design.

    I have Nokia 5510. I can say the person who gave the ideas for the phone must have been very enthusiastic but quite clueless. Person who created the actual design and had clue about stuff definitely lacked that enthusiasm... and built a phone that mostly sucks.

    1) Qwerty keyboard. Great for SMS, but there's no "notepad", phonebook entries are really short, in most cases the great keyboard is wasted.
    2) Voice dialing, MP3 player, radio, analog audio input But no voice notes/recording. Was it so hard to hook up the microphone to the audio input?
    3) Standard dialtones despite MP3 player. You can listen to MP3/radio only through earphones.
    4) USB link to upload MP3. Works as "USB harddrive" and you can use it to transfer arbitrary data, but the phone can make use only of specially modified MP3s. To upload logos, ringtones, gfx SMS, "blankers" and all that stuff you need a special cable that goes into some strange slot under the battery. Same with using it as modem. USB for music only.

    In short, this is a box with several devices that are simply not interconnected or very loosely connected. Things that would be trivial weren't done. (took me 5 mins to build a "powered microphone" to record voice over analog input) The idea was great, the final product sucks. Even greatest OS won't do any good if people won't use their imagination and do some obvious Good Things.
    • I played with 7650 which is real Symbian model and it's much better than 5510. Probably you will like also 6800 or 6810 ("coming soon") which feature full qwerty keyboard, and are much better programmed. Of course you are right pointing all the weak points of 5510, but keep in mind, that it's a low-end model (if hardware is not a problem anymore, it's software what makes a difference). Also it was released some time ago, and will not give you all the features you may expect today.
    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • "I'd just like to see Symbian controlled by people who actually like technology rather than the somewhat PHBish people who have controlled them so far"

        I've got a mate who works for Symbian, and after he first got the job back in 2000 he was always enthusing about how great they were. I clearly remember him telling me how most of the higher managers were from a technical/engineering background.
    • ...some intelligent geeks for design.

      Sorry to pick on you, but it is this sort of comment that pisses me off about techies trying to do design. There are basically two competing schools of design

      KISS and WILI.

      KISS is Keep it Simple Stupid and works well, this gets you elements that actually work and are clean to their purpose

      WILI is Well I Like It and is typified by the "wouldn't it be great if" and "I'd like to see" arguments that come so often from the technical, and graphic design, communities.

      Nok
      • What are obvious Good Things in your WILI world wouldn't actually make the product great.

        Yes. But they would make it helluva better.

        When I bought it, I deeply believed I'll be able to do interesting stuff with it through USB, use it as a modem and such stuff. "That phone has USB" was one of catch phrases. The other was QWERTY keyboard. I like to write stuff and often find myself without any kind of writing tools when I have some cool idea. I hoped it would work as my personal notepad. - "If it has a keyb
    • Remember that 5510 is just a tweak. If you open it's back to get access to the battery and so on, you see that it's actually a 3310 with another pile of plastic around it. Yes, it actually has another phone in it. It's just a software update (with as minor as possible hardware adjustments) for 3310. And that can be seen whatever you do with the phone. For example the keylock function. Of course they couldn't make the keylock work by menu+asterisk anymore, as asterisk is behind Shift key. So, it's now menu+s
  • by rzbx ( 236929 ) <slashdot@rzb x . o rg> on Sunday November 09, 2003 @09:38PM (#7431272) Homepage
    "A takeover of Psion would give Nokia control over Symbian and help it head off growing competition in cellphone software from Microsoft, the world's largest software company."

    How exactly will this "...help it head off growing competition..."?

    I dislike these articles that come to some sort of conclusion or make statements and provide no insight as to how they themselves came to that conclusion.
    Am I missing something here?
    • by Anonymous Coward
      Not to mention that Nokia would certainly alienate the other owners of Psion if it were to take a controlling share, and drive them to reconsider installing a Microsoft OS instead. The sole reason Symbian was given its current position as the primary cell phone OS was to fend off Microsoft, without giving any single handset vendor undue control over the software. To suggest that the other handset vendors would idly sit by while Nokia takes control of their common software is ridiculous. In conclusion, th

    • And in terms of "growing" competition, umm yes really big competition. About the most sold Microsoft OS phone was the SPV at 50,000 units. The SonyEricsson P800 (Symbian) sold over 1,000,000 and the companies in control of Symbian are ALL out to keep microsoft away from this market. So in many ways Nokia NOT having overall control will be better for Nokia as it will help keep everyone together.

      Microsoft are currently as much of a threat to Nokia's phone market as Nokia are to Microsoft's PDA market....
  • Ownership breakdown (Score:5, Informative)

    by TornSheetMetal ( 411584 ) on Sunday November 09, 2003 @09:40PM (#7431290)
    The current ownership of Symbian breaks down as follows: Nokia 32.2, Psion 31.1, Ericsson 17.5, Samsung 5.0, Siemens 4.8, and Sony Ericsson 1.5
    • This is a nerd site after all.
    • by zurab ( 188064 )

      The current ownership of Symbian breaks down as follows: Nokia 32.2, Psion 31.1, Ericsson 17.5, Samsung 5.0, Siemens 4.8, and Sony Ericsson 1.5

      In a follow-up story Nokia detailed that in case their Psion acquisition plans failed, they would try to acquire Ericsson next. This would give them a 49.7% share of Symbian, which would prompt them to take over either of: Sony, Siemens, or Samsung. Nokia representative concluded that they would do whatever it takes to acquire control of Symbian.

      Seriously, I hope

  • by PierceLabs ( 549351 ) on Sunday November 09, 2003 @09:42PM (#7431297)
    For some reason I don't think that it would be a good idea to have Symbian controlled by an Nokia. One of the good things about Symbian is that it is beign advanced to cover the needs of general mobile applications, and should this become co'opted by a single party like Nokia it is likely that such a vendor focus could stunt the growth of the Symbian platform overall.
    • ..cept for one fact: There is no such thing as the "growth of the Symbian platform". Owners are selling out. (Motorola) Or starting to produce Microsoft phones. (Samsung)

      "Give the devil your little finger and he tears your arm off.."

      To have Symbian controlled by Nokia may be their only viable alternative to survive. It would give them the cute opportunity of pulling some "MS stunts" back at MS.. How about incompatability with MS phones... "Mmmmm.... incompatible.."

      • Nice troll. Motorola's future according to themselves is with Linux, and while they are going to make a MS smartphone they already have smartphones (A920) based on Symbian with successors coming (A925). Sendo started with MS and are now making a Symbian-based phone, and Samsung were in bed with MS _before_ they joined Symbian.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday November 09, 2003 @09:43PM (#7431309)
    Anyone else read the title, "Nokia Taking Over Psion to Control Symbian?", and wonder what science ficiton novel we were talking about?

    I assume Nokia is the bad governement, Psion is a planet (or some such), and Symbian is some resource/person/super_robot?
  • In-Gauge (Score:3, Funny)

    by mrpuffypants ( 444598 ) * <mrpuffypants@gm a i l . c om> on Sunday November 09, 2003 @09:56PM (#7431376)
    After their wild success with the greatest hand-held game platform (I speak, of course, of the N-Gage) there's NOTHING that Nokia can't do!

    oops, forgot the sarcasm tags
  • Symbian OS (Score:5, Interesting)

    by vlad_petric ( 94134 ) on Sunday November 09, 2003 @09:58PM (#7431383) Homepage
    Most people who worked with it will tell you the same thing: as far as programability is concerned, Symbian OS just sucks ...

    Symbian was designed for devices with small memory. This, unfortunately, comes at a price - even doing simple string operations can be quite a chore. Memory is really cheap these days, so its advantage is diminishing

    I do own a Psion Revo, and its doing its job excellently. It never required a reboot, unlike my Zaurus PDA which did (although the current ROMs are quite stable). But ...

    With a linux programming background, developing for the Zaurus simply means that you have to get used to its resolution & a few other minor quirks (I never developed for WinCE, but I'm pretty sure a Windoze developer would say that it's pretty much the same thing). Developing for Symbian means learning a new philosophy. Learning a new programming philosophy is worth it when the number of devices sold for that OS is high (e.g. Palm). But Symbian devices never sold that well (at least in the US).

    This is probably one of the reasons Psion uses WinCE for its newest Netbook.

    • WinCE (audio) sucks (Score:5, Interesting)

      by js7a ( 579872 ) * <`gro.kivob' `ta' `semaj'> on Sunday November 09, 2003 @10:58PM (#7431659) Homepage Journal
      One of the huge advantages that Symbian has is that as a licensed developer, you can look at the source, unlike WinCE, which ends up with very buggy audio drivers on every single one of the five WinCE platforms I've developed on. Back in v2 days, WinCE was fairly lean and reasonably real-time, although it's always had a problem with unpredictable garbage collection every 100K new()s or so. But the Win32-spawned waveIn() routines are a disgusting nightmare for both the device driver author and the API user. They suck beyond any reasonable measure. This fact results in WinCE devices with intermittent audio bugs, intermittent distortion, intermittent crashes and panics, incorrect calling semantics, and behavior inconsistent with the same Win32 functions.

      People always ask why their WinCE devices don't have decent audio integration with the phone. It's because WinCE audio drivers universally stink.

      Symbian, on the other hand, lets you prove your audio channels correct and step through the whole stack with your favorite debugger. I would give up stoopid Wind32 HWND semantics for that ability any day of the week. It's not "learning a new philosophy," it's, "getting rid of Microsoft's x86-based Win32 encumbarances and closed source." I am sure others who speak from experience agree.

    • The only reason you would have a hard time doing string operations (descriptors) on Symbian is if you're writing bad code normally. Keeping track of pointers to heap allocated memory and tight string operations are two of the strengths of Symbian.

    • Re:Symbian OS (Score:3, Interesting)

      by ultrabot ( 200914 )
      Symbian was designed for devices with small memory. This, unfortunately, comes at a price - even doing simple string operations can be quite a chore. Memory is really cheap these days, so its advantage is diminishing

      I've read this very statement before on /., and yet again I'm replying...

      The string (or descriptor, as Symbian calls them) handling on Symbian C++ just rocks compared to char*, because it carries the length around. They are used instead of std::string because the C++ that Symbian was written
  • Psion (Score:4, Funny)

    by Old Wolf ( 56093 ) on Sunday November 09, 2003 @10:03PM (#7431409)
    Is this the same Psion as in Psion Flight Simulator, Psion Chequered Flag, etc. ?

    If so, then maybe Nokia is onto something for its builtin games. I think I have my original cassettes somewhere..
    • Yes it is. Psion was founded in 1980, and for the first 4 years was a software house. In 1984 they started developing handhelds, though the formfactor was a bit klunky. After the QL mess they really stopped developing software, and concentrated on their handhelds.
  • by Anonymous Coward
    Symbian OS is just not ready for the desktop!

    /me slaps self for writing this.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday November 09, 2003 @10:21PM (#7431478)
    I am about to go nuts here because of these rediculous new phones. I went to buy a new cellular phone the other day and they were all clunky, beastly, color-screened, battery hogs that could barely make a phone call. But! They could play a game of the lamest Arkanoid you've ever seen. ONLY for $300, whee!

    These cell phones can't keep a reception, drop calls like hot potatoes, and otherwise sound like shit. To add insult to injury they overheat, lock-up and need to be "rebooted", and damnit their batteries are more powerful and yet fail to last.

    There's a few things I want my cell phone to do if I'm going to pay $300 for the device and $40+ a month for service:

    1) Have a battery life comparable to a landline 900mhz wireless phone. That's hours upon hours of talk time or days upon weeks of standby.

    2) Have audio quality and reliability equal to that of a land phone even when moving although in a reasonable location (not underground).

    3) Be thinner, not smaller. I've got big hands so I can't be holding something 0.7" across. But that doesn't mean I need a phone that needs a man-bag, my pockets should suffice. Half an inch or less is something to shoot for on thickness. Height and width should be like a normal phone: It's got to reach from my ear to my mouth, right?

    4) Not to heat up like a red-hot poker after 20 minutes of talking. Maybe that's a tactic in combination with the atrocious battery life to keep us from taking advantage of free nights and weekends.

    As far as I'm concerned all that other internet, symphonic ring tone, downloadable wallpaper, customizable faceplate crap can be sacrificed until they get it right. I want a goddamn phone. Stop giving me overpriced toys for overgrown 12-year-olds.
    • You're right, phones are getting too complicated. Mine picked up MS-BLAST the other day so I ran it over with my car. However it was smart enough to roll out of the way before the wheel got to it.
    • by Anonymous Coward
      Be thinner, not smaller... Height and width should be like a normal phone: It's got to reach from my ear to my mouth, right?

      Nice, so now we can look forward to a new series of spam pushing "cell phone enlargers."
    • by defjesta ( 620657 ) on Sunday November 09, 2003 @11:19PM (#7431762)
      I dont believe you are giving credit were it is due, and I also dont know what phones / deals you have been looking at, but I think you need have a good look at whats going on before opening your mouth. I've heard mobile carrier support is useless at best in the US, and globaly they are a very small player in the cellular world. This would probably explain why your paying so much for so little. And the games! maybe a couple years ago your comment on "lamest Arkanoid" could be justified, but certainly not these days. The nokia 60 series has a 100mhz ARM core, coding in c++ and optimising with ASM can get some impressive results. What did Quake run on when it first came out? (yes i know the differences in chip architechture, but clock for clock 100 mhz is still damn fast for a phone). Your points are laughable and can only be explained if you are using a 1st generation phone. Wake up and stop trying to slow the march of progress.
      • ...I want my phone to make calls, and thats it...period. I've had so much trouble with newer phones...9 Nokia 8210's in one year (they got replaced free of charge whenever they got borked...which as you can see was often). Now, the 8210 is not a new phone, it's not even particularly advanced, but it's got more in there than I need and thus more to go wrong.

        I want a phone that looks nice, is fairly small, has a vibrate function (so I can put it on silent but still know theres a call coming in, so don't e
    • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday November 09, 2003 @11:31PM (#7431818)
      If you're with ATT Wireless, Cingular, or T-Mobile (and possibly other smaller carriers), then use a Ericsson R-520. It does what you want, its fairly long, has great battery life, its cheap - and when you find a newer phone you like (perhaps a UMTS enabled clamshell...) all you have to do is move your SIM, since its GSM. There are plenty of cheap 1900MHz and even Tri-Band (1900/1800/900) MHz gsm phones that will do what you want.

      More importantly, if you buy one of these cheaper phones (like an unlocked/sim-free R520 or 3390) the carrier has no justification for locking you into a contract (since they aren't subsidizing your phone), so if you get poor service, you can simply put a new sim in your old phone that has your old contacts already in it.
      • Me Too! I was about to say that :-)

        I have an R520m; it's a reasonable size but only ~10mm thin (I have friends who claim it's a "thin brick"). Fully charged, mine claims over 2 1/2 hours of talk time, 160hrs standby (and that's pessimistic estimate when I pull it out of the charger). It has bluetooth, IrDA and GPRS packet data, if you feel like using them, excellent sound quality and amazingly good reception. Oh, and it's tri-band, and I picked mine up online for NZ$250 (~US$120?) a year ago.
    • Pussy boy (Score:2, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward
      " Not to heat up like a red-hot poker after 20 minutes of talking."

      Dude,

      guys don't talk on the phone that long.

      That's a girl thing. Here's a guy's conversation.

      First: Man to Man:

      Man 1: Hey what's up
      Man 2: Let go to a strip club
      Man 1: Fuckin' a. I'll be over in 1/2 an hour.

      BOOM. Phone hangs up. Conversation is less than a minute.

      Second: Man to Woman .....

      This doesn't happen

      Third: Woman to Man
      Woman: Hey, what's up
      Man: I'm kinda busy right now.
      Woman: Can you come over? I'll make you dinner, you
    • I think I found what you are looking for.
      • Nokia 3330: no arkanoid, cheap, sturdy, medium size
      • Nokia 6310: long, thin, no color screen, but comes with bluetooth, etc.
      • Frankly, most phones from 1-2 years ago adhere to your standard, did you really do a search or ask for what you want?
    • hey ! Didnt anyone tell you ? phone size is inversely proportional to cock size. You much have a really huge dong
  • by numbski ( 515011 ) * <[numbski] [at] [hksilver.net]> on Sunday November 09, 2003 @10:37PM (#7431555) Homepage Journal
    <deadpan<
    I have to admit, I never really pictured Nokia to be the lonely, under-stimulated type. So far as controlling Sybian, I've never seen one personally, but from what I've read Sybians have fairly simple, yet robust controls, I don't really think it would be neccessary to purchase Psion to get the desired results.

    Oh, and so far as 'remaining open', I think it would go completely against the design of Sybian to go closed. I mean you would lose most available functionality by closing up all of a sudden.
    </deadpan<
  • Nokia's stock(NYSE: NOK) would surge from its current stable of around 17 bucks a share to something in the 20s range if this actually happened. And possibly along with it would surge all of the telecommunications companies with stakes in the Symbian OS for their mobile phones, like Sony-Ericsson and the others.

    This is an exciting development to keep an eye on...
  • What it means is (Score:2, Insightful)

    by TerryAtWork ( 598364 )
    people had better hang on to their copies of the source code for this OS because it's going to disappear into a corporation's vaults.

  • They better act fast (Score:4, Informative)

    by rkaa ( 162066 ) on Sunday November 09, 2003 @11:57PM (#7431922)
    There are more potential renegades than Motorola in their the Sybian ranks.
    Samsung are about to announce their first Mobile Windows device. [infosyncworld.com]
    A week ago, InfoSync ran a piece on the upcoming Microsofts Mobile Windows features.
    Interesting [infosyncworld.com] reading.
    • This is nothing special.

      Samsung was always grazing at both sides of the fense. I don't think they are about to dump Symbian.

      Motorolla otoh never really warmed up to Symbian though.

      • Motorola doesn't know what the hell it's doing. "We're going to use SymbianOS... no, PalmOS... no, WinCE... no, Linux." (I may have some of those out of order.) Their hardware isn't bad but they don't seem to have a clue when it comes to software, and it seems like they can't commit to anything. So far I think they have released one phone with each of SymbianOS and Linux.
  • by PureCreditor ( 300490 ) on Monday November 10, 2003 @12:38AM (#7432096)
    The customization of Symbian OS for P900 is nearly perfect by all accounts. It feels like a phone but with powerful PDA functionality. MP3, video, touch screen, J2ME...you name it. Althought I think the UI on it has a bit too many colors, making it a bit fancy for those who prefer the simplicity of Palm OS (okay, PalmOS default GUI is rather plain). One thing though - the camera should be megapixel with flash and digital zoom (or better, optical). Symbian did a great job on the P900 and the Nokia 6600 because it's so flexible to each manufacturer's specification. I'd hate to see the OS becoming Nokia centric (very stable, but on the lagging edge of new features). My last point can be shown by how long it took Nokia to release a phone with a 65K color screen, a resolution better than 128x128, and omni-Bluetooth-presence. Also, the 8910i being dual-band does nothing to help expand its market share to the high-end executives in USA and Canada who have to settle with lessor products by Motorola....

    If Nokia can make all their medium and high end phones Series 60 (symbian based), that'll be good. Series 40 is nice but way too slow (comparable to T68i speed...imagine...) And I think Samsung

  • Sounds good to me. (Score:3, Interesting)

    by kinema ( 630983 ) on Monday November 10, 2003 @01:22AM (#7432240)
    I wouldn't mind seeing this happen. Then Sony Ericsson might think about moving from Symbian to Linux with Qt/Embedded. I don't really like the way Nokia seems to be going with their new form factors. I prefere phones like Ericsson's P800 and P900. The only problem with them in my opinion (asside from price) is the OS. If the P900 ran Linux and Qt/Embedded you would basicly have a Zaurus with GSM. This works great for me as I tend to use my headset for nearly all my calls.
    • Then Sony Ericsson might think about moving from Symbian to Linux with Qt/Embedded.

      Which would mean no more smartphones from Sony Ericsson for a long time.

      Why?

      Because Symbian is there, it works as a phone OS and has done so for a couple of years. Linux/Qt is not there as a phone OS. It needs a lot of work to become as functional and polished as Symbian is now.

      But Nokia would of course love such a decision. Having their main competitor leave the market for a year or so would be absoulute wonderful f

      • Qtopia Phone Edition [trolltech.com] is likely to appear on a phone soon.

        The Motorola A760 is using Linux/Qt [trolltech.com], not Qtopia Phone Edition, but it's basically the same thing.

        You say Linux/Qt needs a lot of work to become as functional and polished as Symbian, so I'm assuming you have used one of these phones as it's the only one around that uses Linux and Qt so far. What's it like? I haven't found any reviews yet.

        Rik

  • link [vnunet.com][07-11-2003]
  • ...the headline, which sounds like it's from an "Ultraman" episode. Sorry.
  • I still believe J2ME is a better mobile platform than Symbian...
    • And if you had half-a-clue about mobile technologies, you would know that J2ME is just a middlet engine sitting on top of a real operating system.

      Infact, atleast 7700 will have the J2ME engine integrated. Dunno about others.

      (Java should die anyway. Fucked up technology.)
      • >And if you had half-a-clue about mobile
        >technologies, you would know that J2ME is just a
        >middlet engine sitting on top of a real
        >operating system.

        You're not me, and I believe I have more clue than you do - if you had half-a-clue about any technologies in the 90's at all, or at least some reading skills, you could have told the difference between a "platform" and an "operating system".

        J2ME is a "real" platform - as "real" as your definition of a "real" operating system - that ideally runs on a
  • ...thanks to guerilla actions by the Symbianese Liberation Army!
  • What does this mean for the Symbian OS, which is currently an open OS?"

    In what sense is Symbian OS "open"? It looks to me like it's a proprietary set of APIs and a proprietary product that is controlled by a single company that just happens to have a lot of investors. That's better than Windows CE, but still not "open".

    I think the best thing for the phone market would be if it switched aggressively to truly open systems. That means systems with open APIs (POSIX, X11, Gtk+) and preferably open source i
  • Symbian is already under Nokia's control. It's an open OS in name only. Psion has already started to experiment with Windows CE: http://www.infosyncworld.com/news/n/4156.html

    This would more be a move by Nokia to make sure that Psion (who's EPOCH OS was the basis for Symbian) doesn't jump ship. They've lost Motorola and others.

    To be honest, Symiban would only benefit - the consortium has not been as effective as it could have been - it's only been Nokia's intervention that's helped them make any progres
  • Symbian (Score:2, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward
    I've programmed on Symbian and it's just a
    terrible development environment. Think C++
    with lots of overloaded operators and wall-to-wall
    typedefs and coding infrastructure rules.
    Understanding one line of code can take hours.
    The books are all written by Symbian apologists
    and are very annoying to read. For example, at
    one point one of the books presents as a virtue
    the fact that Symbian makes 27 memory allocations
    for each keyclick, saying in effect that "the system is doing a lot for the user".

    Regular makefile

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