For some reason there seems to be a “Symbian is dead” meme floating around at the moment. Discussions with some of the infected victims suggest that it’s related to a misunderstanding of Nokia’s Symbian roadmap and the respective roles of Symbian and Maemo in Nokia’s strategy. Firstly, Nokia isn’t dumping Symbian. Despite all its weaknesses Symbian had over 40% smartphone market share in the first quarter of 2010. It’s the dominant platform with more than twice
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More than 200m Nokia smartphone users worldwide can now use voice-over-Internet Protocol calling software Skype on their handsets, potentially causing a headache for mobile operators everywhere
It’s hard to believe that it’s been only 30 months since Taiwan’s Asus invented the netbook market with its Eee…
When Nokia introduced its now iconic E71 smartphone in July 2008, it represented a huge leap over its predecessor, the…
Operating systems were all the talk last week at Mobile World Congress, the cellphone industry’s annual confab in Barcelona. Apple, Microsoft, Google, Nokia and others are engaged in a battle over whose software will run the next generation of smartphones
Mobile World Congress, the cellphone industry’s annual confab in Barcelona, Spain, kicked off on Monday. We’ll be bringing you the highlights of the event each day this week, including the important product launches and other announcements
Nokia and Intel have announced that they will merge the best elements of their Maemo and Moblin Linux-based mobile operating…
This week, security expert Dominic White makes his debut on the show. He joins Brett Haggard, Duncan McLeod and Simon Dingle to discuss the ongoing Google-China debacle, free Nokia maps, Telkom’s Sat-3 problems, and much more
[Best of the Web — Monday, 18 January 2010] Nokia, Apple step up war of words: The fight between Nokia…
Madhava Enros, user experience lead for Firefox for Mobile, provides a demonstration of the popular Web browser running on a…