| By Open Web Developer News Desk | Article Rating: |
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| November 5, 2007 08:00 AM EST | Reads: |
16,562 |
According to USA Today this morning, Google today "plans to announce the formation of an 'open phone' coalition, with the goal of developing an operating system for the so-called Google Phone."
In the key quote from the article, Morgan Gillis of the LiMo Foundation, says:
"If you're a developer, you'll be able to develop (applications) for the new Google Phone very quickly."
The report adds: "Sprint, the No. 3 carrier, supports the coalition, but it hasn't formally agreed to make the Google Phone available to its 54 million subscribers."
One of Google's mantras is: "We believe one of our chief competitive advantages is surprise."
Published November 5, 2007 Reads 16,562
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Don Babcock 11/06/07 09:18:29 AM EST | |||
It was only a matter of time. For years the telecomms have locked out developers with the requirement for proprietary code signing and other barriers to development on mobile devices. I'll gladly support the Google effort including subscribing to their service if only to show support for "breaking" the monopoly held by the telecoms. Mobile devices should be no different than PC's in terms of development. There's just too much potential that has been denied in the name of "security." |
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devvxn 11/05/07 07:23:13 PM EST | |||
I am familiar with OpenMoko but the device base is still weak and it doesn't support windows mobile either. For true ubiquitous computing, you need all major OSs supported and a wider device range. These guys have a great vision though and definitely predate Google's announcement. But even before OpenMoko, Voyager which used to be an Objectspace product, has been going this route for years. From what I've seen it supports the widest range of OSs I have seen and is Java to .NET agnostic. But they still aren't on CLDC phones, so I'm going to hold off on a recommendation. But they have P-2-P and P-2-Group publish/ subscribe which I haven't seen from anyone else without proprietary hardware. recursionsw.com |
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an0n 11/05/07 10:23:53 AM EST | |||
They could call it OpenMoko and then a lot of the work would have been done for them already - here's the link: http://OpenMoko.org |
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