Friday, March 30, 2007

Freescale chip in Nokia 5700 phone?

I have to agree with Michael Mace when he says that in blogosphere (and not only there) a buzz pinged back and forward became a news

Why? Because of this abstract:

...The 5700 runs S60 3rd Edition Feature Pack 1 and is based on a 369 MHz Freescale solution (same chip in the 6290). I can't find anything about the chip inside the 5070.Is the 5700 the cheapest S60 device to ever be released? Is this all thanks to Freescale's lower prices?...

Ring Nokia: Last day of CTIA: Nokia launches 5700 and 5070

Simon Judge reported the news even if he's wondering why no official announce has been issued.

Well, I don't know which CPU is shipped with Nokia 5700 but I doubt it's Freescale one.

I want to be extremely clear I work in Freescale but this is NOT an official announce. As far as I know, Freescale MXC single core architecture is not yet shipped within Nokia phones.

Eventually, it would be interesting to know which is the actual 'single chip' in N5700 and whether Ring Nokia have had the chance to have a look inside such phone during CTIA.


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Wednesday, March 28, 2007

Carnival of the mobilist #66 at AllAboutSymbian



This week Carnival of the Mobilist is host by All About Symbian. Enjoy reading blog entries on every aspects of mobile world.

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Sunday, March 18, 2007

Open source Symbian OS ? New frontier or blasphemy

The fact that Symbian has an outstanding position in smatphone OS market isn't something new, as it is not new its strong relashionship with Nokia from economical as well as technical point of view. Nokia is the major shareholder of Symbian Co. therefore its predominant position makes less appealing the partecipation of others investors (that little by little reduce their shares) and the arrival of new ones.

Technically speaking, Symbian OS lack of important modules whose implementation is in licensees' scope, namely telephony application, DRM, IMS . This clue makes difficult the work for device manifactures who need to deal with two entities to adapt OS to hadware. In addition it's more difficult to foresee the evolution of the OS and undestand if it will support this technology or that one.

This is a fundamental point in the decision to adopt an OS. The decision influences not only the current platform but also the next ones, in a clear effort to avoid each time to approach a new software platform and its tools, and to reuse as much as possible by previous projects.

What could be the strategy to let Symbian be more appealing and less Nokia dependent? Be open....completely open! Enable single contributors and companies to experiment, to extend your operative system. Its difficult to address each request and even more difficult pick the right ones, but other players can create their niche on topics less interesting for the mainstream industry. Less interesting at present, but who knows what will be the mobile industry trend in 5-10 years? Why should I be a licensee to prototype on Symbian?

Being open source was a revolutionary concept some years ago, but now it's turning into a recognized business model, there is more than Linux...for istance, look at Funambol or Helix.

Even if this would lead to profileration of Symbian distributions, Symbian Co. will mantain a reference position and a reason to be as it is for Red Hat, Real Networks, Funambol...

Maybe someone has already evaluated this solution and even considered if Symbian's major shareholder would allow such disruptive policy in a market where it (Nokia) has a consolitated position!

Maybe someone has even evaluated that without an available reference hardware platform it's hard to prototype anything....Is there any manifacturer listening out there? As far as I know the only project based on open source hardware is OpenMoko. It's more than a geek project to produce a phone since they are near to ship the first phones this month...for developers, and in September for mass market. Of course it's a Linux based project, while FIC has created the hardware platform.


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Thursday, March 08, 2007

Which development platform for Symbian OS?

Red Five Labs have ported the .NET Compact Framework to Symbian OS.

What does it mean for....

  • developers?

Additional troups of developers are enabled to play on mobile phonespowered by Symbian Os. Even those who are not confortable nor with C++,nor with C, nor with ActionScript, nor to Java, nor with Python, norwith Ruby. I don't care about which one is the best/the smartest/ the coolest, for a bit of fun check this picture :-).

It's true that alternative languages to native Symbian C++ APIs could reduce time for development if you don't need to exploit all the functionalities of the OS.

  • end-users?

The most part of them is not aware which OS drives their mobile phone, nor which language has been used for their favourite game/rss reader/email reader....

What they care about is pay for the coolest phone with a lot of application already installed (just a few users buy software, most part are business men).

What they care is usability: if they do not like the interface of brand X, probably they won't buy a brand X phone again.

  • Symbian OS?

Its position in smartphone market is outstanding and here in Europe is even stronger but there is still room for new players which are gaining market shares. So it needs to remain an attractive solution.

It must be attractive for device makers reducing the effort to make it run to different hardware platform: almost each phone has an ad-hoc design. We are far from using standard interfaces among components, despite an iniziative promoted by industry players.

It must be attractive for third parties who want to offer added services on mobile phones.


I think that offering another alternative to choose Symbian platform is reasonable, but something different is to give argument to prefer it. Arguments like development tools, debug tools, open source projects, community of developers to share knowledge/expertise, libraries to reuse as much as possible.

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Thursday, March 01, 2007

Wiki as an enterprise tool

In my previous post I forgot to mention Wiki as powerful tool for knowledge divulgation, probably because right now I've never used it. Here you can read how difficult is to make in place a proactive community of contributors. It contains patterns and antipatterns to follow to let the community grow as well as the contents.....but it does not contain magic recipe.

Do you have direct experience using Wiki in your company? Please, drop a comment!


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