Nokia Open Sources Symbian
June 30th, 2008 by Justin Ryan
Nokia — the pulp-miller cum cellphone powerhouse — made a bold stroke for the Open Source world last week when they announced the purchase of Symbian Ltd. — then gave away its flagship product.
According to the Nokia brass, they'll begin releasing the popular Symbian OS as an Open Source project around the end of this year, under the auspices of the newly established Symbian Foundation. They'll hand over the code in late 2008/early 2009, and plan to offer up everything else by 2010 — all of it under the Open Source Eclipse Public License. As great as that is — Symbian OS is, after all, the market leader for smartphones — one has to wonder how well they've thought this through, given the recent proclamations from Nokia HQ that when it comes to Open Source, they're "not yet ready to play by the rules."
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Justin Ryan is News Editor for LinuxJournal.com.
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The Oxford English Dictionary says the word "gadget" is a placeholder name for a technical item whose precise name one can't remember. Like that book-reader thingy from Amazon...what's it called? Spindle, Gindle...Kindle, that's it. Check it out in this month's gadget issue.
Other gadgets covered include the Nokia tablets, the BlackBerry, the Neo FreeRunner, the Dash Express, the Roku Netflix Player, the Kangaroo TV, The TomTom GO 930 and the MooBella Ice Cream System. On the larger hardware front, read the reviews of the Acer Aspire One and the YDL PowerStation. On the software front, check out the articles and columns on memcached, Samba security, Mutt, desktop gadgets, bash and Puppet. To wrap it all up, read Doc's thoughts on Google and the browser platform.
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