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Re: Topic of the Day: Should Nokia Drop Meego and roll with Android?
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No handset developer truly wants to create their own OS, as it's outside their scope. They also don't want to be dependent on an OS vendor who will probably compete with them, or seeks to push their brand via the OS. MeeGo is very much neutral territory. Android is not, or it is not Android. |
Re: Topic of the Day: Should Nokia Drop Meego and roll with Android?
I'm still not sold on MeeGo being "neutral" as of yet.
But GM, BMW and quite a few others think so. So I guess there's more research for me to do. |
Re: Topic of the Day: Should Nokia Drop Meego and roll with Android?
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Meego probably just suits best to their use cases. |
Re: Topic of the Day: Should Nokia Drop Meego and roll with Android?
I think the Android is the last option that Nokia is considering. If they fail totally in the smart phone category, who knows? But it's not gonna happen soon.
They have Navteq, they do not want to use Google's maps and navigation. They invested loads on money when purchasing Navteq and have spent more money to developer services suitable for mobile phone use. They have their own app store (sigh...), they do not want to send that money to Android Market. They are trying to pull together a content provider portfolio, like Apple has done. My guess is that Samsung will try to push their Bada as much as possible and try to get rid of MS and/or Android. Samsung also got stuck with Symbian, but they took a different route. There's no point in using three different platforms, and the future of Samsung seems to be similar to Nokia's - independent. Bottom line, Android is an unrealistic option to Nokia. Big corporates do not want to use Android. It will used by small players and corporates that are seriously struggling. Too much money is going to other pockets when using Android. |
Re: Topic of the Day: Should Nokia Drop Meego and roll with Android?
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Re: Topic of the Day: Should Nokia Drop Meego and roll with Android?
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Re: Topic of the Day: Should Nokia Drop Meego and roll with Android?
Bada is interesting in terms it is doing just the reverse MeeGo is doing, while MeeGo is trying to make a unified base that can be fitted with a Qt API (which is in turn universal across other OSes), Samsung is fitting OS-es (or, rather, kernels) INTO their API. Due to this, Nokia's approach has a bit more resource overhead, but on the other hand is easier to maintain and is more universal - as it can easily spread to new OSes (we already have - even if unofficial - Qt for webOS and Android, and a sterling but doomed iOS effort). Plus, as a bonus, it can be retrofitted with very little effort to tens, in not hundreds of millions of existing handsets. As for Bada, the 'low-end' part of the platform has not been released yet, so I can't comment just how well their unified approach works (contrary to Nokia, who have demonstrated Qt working nicely on midrange hardware of 2008).
EDIT: When I say 'not released yet' I mean the new range of low-end spectrum, not the existing, pre-Bada-is-now-cool phones. Also note that Bada is not really aiming for top-tier - the Galaxy stuff is Android, and even on the Bada pages, Bada is positioned more like the OS Samsung wants featurephone users to migrate to - very much the position of Symbian in the Nokia ecosystem. The problem with this is that I don't see the bridge between Android and Bada (the role of Qt in Symbian-MeeGo), and the popularity of Android makes it difficult for Sammy to push Bada into that segment without hurting itself at least on the short term. |
Re: Topic of the Day: Should Nokia Drop Meego and roll with Android?
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Currently the profits from high-end phones are ridiculous, it's not going to be like this forever. Content and services will become more important, and at this point hanging with Google is not that appealing anymore. |
Re: Topic of the Day: Should Nokia Drop Meego and roll with Android?
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MeeGo, being controlled by the Linux Foundation, is owned by an entity with a vested interest only in your participation. |
Re: Topic of the Day: Should Nokia Drop Meego and roll with Android?
So if Nokia takes a sip from the MeeGo fountain, tailors it to one of their device (infuse it with proprietary hw drivers, proprietary UI and a set of proprietary base apps); how would one revert it back to 'open'?
Would it be a simple package removal/substitution? |
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