Linux Crashes the Mobile Party 128
superglaze writes "ZDNet.co.uk has a fairly comprehensive feature on the progress being made by Linux for cellphones. Seems a pretty consumer deal for now, but there are some interesting hints of Linux eventually challenging Windows Mobile and Symbian in business use. The article also seems to suggest that the two big groups pushing mobile Linux could be amenable to a merger due to common interests."
Could this be... (Score:4, Funny)
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I've been getting interviews from Palm almost every few months now for the last year and a half to work on their Linux-based OS (generally, it ends up in me not wanting to relocate for the salary offered, or someone else wanting the job a lot more by agreeing to lower salary requirements). The last one was for a guy to come in and do compatibility bug fixing/testing, which sounded mostly like post-alpha, pre-beta or even beta testing type w
Lips and Limos? (Score:5, Funny)
Limo and Lips sounds like the name for a private escort service.. I can see these guys going far in the industry!
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Good moment? (Score:2, Interesting)
I havent read TFA but Jon Stokes at arstechnica.com has a quite enthusiastic review on Intel's new 45nm mobile processor. He foresees standard x86 operating systems (windows or linux) running even on am/fm radios :P
Intel's x86 ISA grows down: today laptops, tomorrow the iPhone [arstechnica.com].
This might speed-up the development of the wanted-b
RIM is still my choice (Score:1)
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Do you *want* to be devoured by grammar nazis?
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Nothing too too new here. (Score:1, Informative)
Here are some smart phones running Linux.
http://www.linuxdevices.com/articles/AT9423084269.html [linuxdevices.com]
Personally I don't care too much what the OS is so long as it works well enough and lets me get my email too.
Openmoko (Score:5, Informative)
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I have asked this question before and have never gotten an answer. After checking all over the openmoko site, I cannot find out if they are planning on offering something like this in a CDMA version. There are no GSM networks that I can connect to reliably within about a 15-mile radius of where I live and work (I am in
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Re:well,,,, (Score:3, Funny)
"Well thurs your problem!"
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But the GSM provider is the devil ( Rogers ), and I'd rather not go through another three years with them, thank yew very much.
But I really want the OpenMoko phone ( or rather, the FIC Neo 1973 ), but since it's GSM only at the moment....
Then again, what I really want is a wi-fi enabled phone that can run Skype, so I can get a minimal cell plan ( maybe pay-as-you-go ) so that I can use Skype as often as possible, and onl
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- Sprint wimax (not actual cellular, but faster
- SIP phone client (in beta)
- if rumor pictures are to be believed, a slide out qwerty thumb keyboard.
I prefer a different form factor than the slide out, but I can't think of any other device I'd carry once those features are out.
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Re:OpenMoko is not your savior. (Score:5, Informative)
Actually the OpenMoko (aka FIC Neo1973) has the following new additions to hardware on the upcoming Consumer Edition (aka GTA02):
* 802.11 b/g WiFi
* Samsung 2442 SoC
* SMedia 3362 Graphics Accelerator
* 2 3D Accelerometers
* 256MB Flash
* 1700mAh Battery
* Faster CPU - S3C2442/400
* LEDs illuminating the two buttons.
Do you really need a multi-touch screen? Not really. Maybe if you want to sit there and play video games... but that's the only practical use I can see in it.
Most people who are looking at purchasing an OpenMoko phone, are not looking for flashy high-speed bullshit. We want something we can actually use. Most of us are hackers, and that is the need this phone is trying to fill. I want a phone I can build a simple app on for simple things. I'm sorry, but the only reason the iPhone has such high-end hardware, is because it requires the resources for it's bloated software.
Please, for the love of 'steve', quit trolling.
Let me explain just how wrong you are. (Score:2)
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US centric view. In Europe all GSM phones can be used in all networks. The iPhone will be the first exception and I'm sure that this kind of bundling won't hold up in the courts.
The iPhone is the coolest phone around but with three major cons (from a European pov):
a) Only one carrier
b) No native apps
c) no 3G
None of these cons in the 2nd
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Confusing comments (Score:3, Insightful)
For one thing I can't really see how Linux falls down on being "rich enough to deliver applications", and his other points just seem to show that Linux doesn't yet have much market penetration in the mobile market. While this is true, slamming it for that in an article about the Linux entry into the mobile market seems odd. I guess maybe it's just a poorly chosen quote by the author.
Analysts say one thing, companies do another (Score:4, Insightful)
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It is all about selling hardware and providing services and a free software layer on top ju
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Let me translate that for you.
"rich enough" == "can read proprietary M$Outlook's rich text messages and winmail.dats"
"deliver applications", not sure but in context sounds like "automatically download malware"
"multiple manufacturers" == not a product but technology. Notice that no word of "based on international/etc standards" in there.
So in other words ... M$'s thou
Big Deal (Score:4, Interesting)
I've said this before on slashdot and I know I will be modded troll so enjoy.
mod parent up (Score:2)
Re:also true (Score:2)
IE they may sell you a cable at the VZ store, especially if you don't use outlook, your patching together something not really supported by the carriers.
http://bitpim.sourceforge.net/ [sourceforge.net] is the only useable solution to the LG phones that I have found, and it works equally on windows and linux.
I assume this is not needed for the treo, or Windows mobile phones. But it seams no carriers want to support getting your pictures, etc off y
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You're falling into the trap...
"Supported by the phone" is different from "supported by the carriers". Of course, the less we remember that, the less true it will be.
i'm not talking about connectivity (Score:2)
I've never seen bitpim, so that's interesting. Unfortunately, I do a bit too much international travel for it to be practical for me to use a CDMA phone. Looks spiffy, though.
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valid. Really what I think is wanted is just a open platform. Most likely the linux phones will be locked like the Iphone to start with.
I am a bit of a MicroSoft hater, but I do want a wm5 phone because I love the Garmin mobile 10 GPS unit. A all integrated phone this size of a deck of cards is great. but 5 years ago I was up in Vancover, back of a cab, gps wouldn't work, combination of heavy overcast sky, tall building ba
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We really do need this... (Score:3, Interesting)
I dream of being able to run Linux on this thing... and have it actually work, of course. I just checked handhelds.org again this morning, and this still wasn't the case. Frankly, I don't really see community effort ever coming back around to my device. Not at least as a phone with camera and GPS, etc. I do dream of some larger organization, e.g. Ubuntu, taking a stab at this some day...
I'm the biggest nerd in the world, I know, but at least I'm in the right place.
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1) One already exists. I honestly don't think that it will ever result in my phone running Linux, but I'd rather not detract from it. They just might pleasantly surprise me someday.
2) I don't code. Not that I can't, I just hate it. With a passion. I'll leave that to others and just try and give feedback, support other users, etc. It isn't the 'Number One' role you're supposed to be
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I think this is great. There is good support behind Ubuntu, and hopefully it will start to erode the monopoly of CE et, al. in the small device market.
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seems its more targeted at Intel processors:
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Freedom matters *especially* on phones (Score:4, Insightful)
I strongly disagree. While I think phone UIs tend to be far from perfect and agree there's a lot of room for improvement, they're usable. I can start a phone call in a few seconds, sometimes a lot quicker than that.
I think the main problems with today's phones are:
btw Windows mobile is a sham (Score:4, Informative)
At my job everyone used to have blackberrys w/ Nextel. Their data network at the time sucked big time (may or may not still be the case). So as the phones aged and everyone got tired of Nextel, we switched to Cingular. I'm not 100% sure why we changed the phones, but a few Windows guys started looking at Windows Mobile based phones. The key features for this were suppose to be
* Since it's Windows, there is a huge array of applications
* Since it has Internet Explorer, we can use all of our websites and IE quirks
* Since it's Windows and windows has a standard API, our windows programmers could write programs for it
* Basically every advantage you can think of for a full blown version of Windows compacted into a phone
Well we got them. Started using them. Crash. But not a normal crash. Remember, these are phones. So you'd spend the whole morning wondering why you haven't gotten any calls yet and it turns out the phone froze. This is completely unacceptable for a phone. I got used to checking my phone every hour to make sure it didn't need to be rebooted.
But heck, rebooting a phone every once in awhile isn't a huge deal to be able to use almost every Windows application ever! Out of all the smartphone OS's I've dealt with, in reality, Windows Mobile has the least amount of quality applications available for it. A lot of standard things everyone did on the Blackberry's were lost simply because there was no Windows Mobile equivalent program. It turns out most developers have no interest in porting their apps to Windows Mobile. Why not? Well this brings me to the next point...
We've had these phones 2 years, and not a single one of our Windows developers has written a program for it. Why? Because touting it as anything like regular Windows development is a flat out lie. Writing programs for a mobile phone is nothing like a traditional application. They couldn't use many/most of their normal development tools. Writing for limited hardware is a whole different ballpark. Microsoft tried to take their traditional developers and throw them into the mobile phone arena, and those developers simply aren't equipped to do it, and get discouraged and don't write anything for the platform.
Every advantage that relied on the fact "it's basically Windows" went right out the window because, in reality, it's nothing like desktop versions of Windows. We were left with an experience that was significantly worse than the Blackberry's. So guess what? We're getting rid of thousands of dollars worth of phones because the experience truly is that bad. We're going back to Blackberry.
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Lay men would simply accept these limitations.
Someone like me would w
Our little baby is all grown... hey wait a second! (Score:3, Interesting)
The Cell Phone will become ubiquious in ways computers never could be. Even laptops don't get into places you will find phones.
Re:Our little baby is all grown... hey wait a seco (Score:1, Insightful)
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Re:Our little baby is all grown... hey wait a seco (Score:1)
Sure, i can see it how far, places like the botton of a toilet seat, you kitchen sink, street mail boxes... you name it...
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The truth is that you're a trolling AC.
Everybody would want to do this (Score:2)
Peter
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Dare I say it, a Beowulf cluster of phones?
I'm a bit more cynical about Linux than I used to be, but I still think I'd feel a little thrill if I saw a bash prompt on my phone. I actually quite wanted one when I was doing my PhD. I could use ssh to start a big job running and monitor its progress even when away from the lab. I could even set it up to ring me when it was finished, or when it had halted at some critical moment.
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http://s2putty.sourceforge.net/ [sourceforge.net]
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http://mako.cc/copyrighteous/images/xo_plus_openmoko-03-boot.jpg [mako.cc]
OpenMoko has SSH in and out of course (get a shell on your phone's OS, or use your phone to connect to a prompt on some other computer)
Gartner Analysts (Score:4, Insightful)
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What's the Selling Point? (Score:4, Insightful)
What are the real selling points of a smart-phone?
* The applications
* The development environment (promise of new, better apps soon)
* Linking to other devices (syncing)
* The interface
* The phone functions
Apple have just sewn up the interface, everyone gets the phone functions pretty much right, syncing is okay generally (non-Windows phones are hurt by closed Exchange servers), most people do apps reasonably well and the dev environment is okay for some, not so hot for others (Apple).
How will a Linux smart-phone distinguish itself from the pack? It's no longer enough to be as good as the rest. These phones have to be much better. Maybe the better APIs and adherence to standards will be enough. It won't win the 'cool' factor that we saw the iPhone blitz just recently, but maybe it'll be enough.
I'd like to see more sizzle to help sell the sausage.
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I believe that the n800 [wikipedia.org] would do strongly in your rubric (applications, dev environment, syncing, interface and phone - voip). I believe that it can even do exchange (at least the 770 did through third-party software). As far as the dev environment, applications, etc check this out. [maemo.org] It's not a phone, but it does do VOIP, as well as hundreds of other useful (and not so useful) [internettablettalk.com] things.
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Amen! Now since you brought this subject up I just remembered that I need to renew my prescription for sedatives...
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Personally, I would like a phone that would double as an EE tool: rugged design, flexible analogue and digital interfaces, measures voltage, resistance, capacitance, inductance, frequency/period, duty cycle, temperature, logs periodic measurements, shows analog waveforms (doubles oscilloscope), synthesizes audio test sine waves, analyzes audio specter, has easy to set up
Nokia n800 (Score:5, Interesting)
I already have my Linux mobile device, and I couldn't be happier with it. It attaches to my bluetooth headphones, keyboard, gps, and phone (DUN) without any problems. I can use xterm to ssh to my server, or stream internet radio or video at work. Oh yea, and I jammed 16GB of SDHC storage into the thing, so I have a decent music selection. The current version does not have a cell phone radio, but the next one will carry a WiMax chip, and possibly some other new hardware goodies.
On a related note, Ubuntu's Moblin and Red Flag's Midinux will be out relatively soon for use on UMPCs and MIDs. So, I'd agree that things are looking up for those of us who want more than e-mail and pim on our mobile devices. I'm not sure that I care *as much* about having Linux on my cell phone, as long as it will act as a modem to my other device and make phone calls. I want them to be separate, mostly so that I can make sure not to kill the battery on the cell phone, just in case I actually need it.
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Bluetooth Headphones with n800 (Score:3, Informative)
You can use kagu [guardiani.us] music player that works with a2dp [internettablettalk.com] bluetooth audio. [guardiani.us] I don't know about headsets (for voip), haven't really been too interested in that, although I know that it's coming. Sound quality is very good with a2dp, and avrcp (remote control) works fairly well with kagu too.
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Re:Nokia 770 (Score:1)
Don't forget Sun (Score:5, Informative)
Incorrect quote... (Score:5, Insightful)
"Imagine I'm an IT manager contemplating standardising on a mobile platform. I want something rich enough to deliver applications, that's available from multiple manufacturers, offering a decent range of handsets with corporate features. Linux just falls down on all of those."
The point of "that's available from multiple manufacturers", while a very valid point, surely linux is the only one that really is available from multiple manufacturers.
With symbian or windows mobile, you may be able to get the hardware from multiple vendors, but your stuck with a single vendor for the software. With linux, as the article states, there are at least 2 groups pushing mobile linux, and multiple hardware manufacturers also rolling their own.
The freedom of being able to buy your hardware from multiple vendors doesn't is far less of an advantage if you only have one vendor to buy the software from, whereas the freedom to obtain both hardware and software from multiple vendors is a huge benefit to the purchaser.
Gartner; hehehehe. (Score:4, Insightful)
mobile linux (Score:1, Interesting)
suuurrreee (Score:2)
Sure there have been 2 or 3 phones that were either not widely available or just phones without the smart
With a real smartphone I mean something with a real keyboard (Nokia E61i, blackberry) or something like the sony-ericsson M600i. A thing that can play music, surf the web, read email, has a touchscreen etc. NONE so far.
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All the others, including linux, still suffer in my eyes with ease of use and integration issues and will continue to have that into the future.
This doesn't have to be the case if companies invest time into building well thought out interfaces on top of linux. The idea here is simply that linux is a great platform to do this kind of thing.
In regards to Apple, I think they do what they think will maximize their profits only. If you think about it, the used and included FOSS in order to gain developers,
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They used FOSS tools and applications to actually implement sections of the kernel and low-level userspace, not just for developers and "increased interest". GCC is the MacOS X compiler, BSD is the UNIX user space, Darwin is the kernel. And as seen in WebKit and LLVM's clang, they're still making significant contributions-- far beyond most company's small patches and bugfixes--
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Re:I wish Apple opened OS X up more (Score:4, Interesting)
On a phone?
The UI on a Linux phone is very unlikely to resemble any existing Linux desktop any more than the iPhone GUI resembles Aqua.
There's plenty of space for a phone with a UI that has more depth than an iPhone, and more consistency than Windows Mobile. I've just dumped my iMate JasJam for a Sony Ericsson M600i, and it was like taking a breath of fresh air. Symbian/UIQ is much more rational than Windows CE, but I'd still prefer an OS I could customise, and the form factor of the M600 isn't as useful as the iMate.
For me, a Linux phone would be the best of both worlds. If there were any available, I'd have one in my pocket now.