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Linux heads for cell phones

Martyn Williams, IDG News Service   Today’s Top Stories    or  Other Linux and Unix Stories  
 

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January 08, 2003 (IDG News Service) -- The Linux operating system has made the jump from computer servers to handheld computers, digital video recorders and wristwatches, and it soon may find a home inside your cellular phone.
NEC Corp. said today that it's working on the development of Linux-based cell phones with MontaVista Software Inc. And an executive at Sunnyvale, Calif.-based MontaVista said the software company is in talks with other major cellular handset makers on similar projects.
Work on the use of Linux in cellular phones started in the final quarter of 2002, said Akiko Shikimori, a spokeswoman for Tokyo-based NEC. The company is looking to use the operating system in handsets for global markets, according to an NEC executive quoted in a MontaVista statement, although Shikimori said the company is still investigating the use of Linux and hasn't yet begun designing its first handset based on the operating system.
NEC isn't the only company interested in using MontaVista's embedded Linux in a cellular phone, said Scott Hedrick, senior product marketing manager for consumer electronics at MontaVista.
"We have a couple of customers that are actively developing GPRS [General Packet Radio Service] phones for the Asian market, which they plan on shipping this year, as well as 3G phone projects for Japan," he said, declining to name the companies. "We are also talking to all the right mobile phone companies in Europe and see some very strong interest.
"A couple of our customers are developing more PDA-like phones with touch screens, but a lot of our customers are looking at developing medium- to high-end phones. One of our customers wants to move its entire product line to MontaVista Linux," Hedrick said, again declining to name the company. "This is a manufacturer that is more focused on the Japanese market," he added.
The arrival of Linux will intensify competition in a competitive sector. PalmSource Inc. has already scored some goals, with several companies offering handsets based on its software. A number of companies are offering phones based on either of Microsoft Corp.'s two offerings for handsets: Windows Powered Smartphone, for phones with limited personal digital assistant (PDA) functionality, and Pocket PC Phone Edition, for devices that are more like traditional PDAs.
There is also the Symbian operating system, which could be the initial loser should Linux gain a foothold in the cellular market, said Hedrick. He said most major handset makers are using Symbian Ltd.'s operating system as more of a tactic to counter Microsoft than as a strategy for advanced handsets.
"Major mobile phone manufacturers are publicly backing Symbian, but privately they are all either our customers or discussing how they can use MontaVista Linux for their phones," he said.
"The problem with Symbian is that it has the outer appearance of being a platform, but when customers looked in the box and at the OS, they were underwhelmed," said Bill Weinberg, director of strategic marketing at MontaVista. "So they have done a great job of building an ecosystem but not building a technology."
Currently, the Symbian operating system is licensed by Nokia Corp., Motorola Inc., Samsung Electronics Co., Siemens AG and Sony Ericsson Mobile Communications AB. London-based Symbian, which is owned by Nokia, Motorola, Siemens, Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Psion Computers PLC and Sony Ericsson, said there were 20 Symbian-based handsets under development as of December.
To further the advance of its embedded Linux system into the cellular market, MontaVista announced a version specifically designed for consumer electronics devices, including PDAs and cellular telephones.
MontaVista Linux Consumer Electronics Edition will be commercially available by the end of March.





Reprinted with permission from

For more news from IDG visit IDG.net
Story copyright 2006 International Data Group. All rights reserved.


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