Twenty New Linux Cell Phones On The Way 16
An anonymous reader writes "Trolltech announced today that more than fifty companies are currently developing or shipping Linux-based devices using its Qtopia graphical application platform software, including more than twenty mobile phones. 'We think that 2005 is going to be a real breakout year for Linux on cellphones,' Trolltech CEO Haavard Nord told LinuxDevices.com. Motorola has already been shipping Linux phones in China, and has achieved its initial objectives there, according to Nord. 'We expect that in 2005, Motorola is going to start shipping Linux phones outside of China,' Nord added."
good and bad (Score:5, Interesting)
That's a good deal for Troll Tech, who gain lots of Qt developers if Qtopia catches on. It's not such a good deal for users, because their choice of toolkits and applications is greatly restricted, and because Qt/Embedded is not a particularly efficient toolkit. Furthermore, the PIM applications that Qtopia ships with simply are nowhere near as good as those on Palm (I have had several Sharp Zaurus PDAs and I wouldn't want to use them as a PDA). It's unfortunate that Linux's first shot at the PDA and phone market is hampered by Qtopia.
Re:good and bad (Score:4, Insightful)
Sadly, although these things are using Linux, it's basically locked away from the user and they're going to make it very hard for the user to actually get at it.
Re:good and bad (Score:2)
Re:good and bad (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:good and bad (Score:2, Insightful)
Joe Sixpack doesn't know what a toolkit is, why should he? Why should he care?
Judging by my Nokia 6600, Symbian isn't all that efficient either but apparently Joe Sixpack doesn't care about that either. I have several friends with 6600s who say it's a lovely phone, etc. etc. but it frustrates me no end. It's slow, it hangs it crash
Re:good and bad (Score:4, Interesting)
You are quite right: users don't care what the toolkit is. They care about size, battery life, performance, ease of use, and choice of software. So do I, in fact. Unfortunately, Qtopia affects all of those negatively relative to other possible GUIs on top of Linux. In the end, the dominance of Qtopia for Linux PDAs/phones may well mean that people will continue to buy mostly Palm and PocketPC-based devices.
Well, at least Palm is switching to a Linux kernel, and unlike Qtopia, their user interface doesn't suck. So, Linux may yet live on PDAs.
So, what do you use to compose text messages? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:So, what do you use to compose text messages? (Score:2)
Who cares! (Score:2)
Right now my biggest point of frustration is how slow my phone can move between functions, and how long it takes to open something as simple as the calculator.
I have a Nokia 6820b, not a cheapo or old phone. I'd expect more from a $200+ USD phone.
Comment removed (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:So what? (Score:2, Interesting)
The WAAS enabled GPS would be most beneficial because it WILL help with getting directions and emergency response times. Through use of tower tracking the precision and accuracy is much enhanced with existing infrastructure.
I am still on the lookout for a waterproof compact flip p
Re: (Score:2)