Friday, June 27, 2008

Races of Giants: NOKIA & GOOGLE

Nokia has hunkered down for a battle with Google as the two behemoths race each other to develop the world's first open source software platform for mobile phones. Last year, Google had cobbled an alliance of 30 partners to develop the Android, a software platform that would allow developers to build a suite of applications for mobile phones.

But now Nokia has undermined the alliance by teaming up with a bunch of heavy hitters - some of them members of the Android alliance - to create a new operating system that promises to have a lot more firepower.Nokia stunned the telecom world by acquiring a 52 per cent stake in Symbian - a British software company - for $410 million. It already owned the rest. The Symbian operating system is the world's foremost smartphone platform, and is about to become much stronger.
Smartphones are handsets with computer-like capabilities.

Nokia, the world's biggest handset maker, will throw Symbian's mobile phone operating system open for royalty-free use. The Finnish giant is launching a non-profit Symbian Foundation that will unite the Symbian operating system with three user interfaces - Nokia's S60, Motorola/Sony's UIQ and NT!' DoCoMo's MOAP - to create one open mobile software platform.

This is exactly what Android had set out to do when Google announced its Open Handset Alliance last November. It had even unveiled a prototype of the Android software at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona back in February. But the Android has run into delays and the industry is abuzz with rumours that it won't be available for tlse in devices before 2009. Google had earlier set a launch dead­line for the second half of this year.

Nokia's ability to persuade some of Android's partners - notably Motorola and Sam­sung - to join its initiative raises questions about whe­ther these companies will still remain committed to Android. If Android loses out, Sym­bian will then get ready for a bigger slugfest with Mi­crosoft's Windows Mobile op­erating software.Unlike Symbian and An­droid, Microsoft doesn't pro­vide its source codes of its program to enable developers to create newer applications. Microsoft is believed to charge between $8 and $15 per phone from handset makers.

By:
Koustav Chowdhury - PGDM 7
(Globsyn Business School - Kolkata)

Source: The Telegraph