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Six of the biggest names in cellular telephony have made good on a promise from last year and announced a new foundation to push Linux standardization and adoption on mobile phones.
Hardware-makers Motorola Inc., NEC Corp., Panasonic Mobile Communications Co. Ltd. and Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd., and carriers NTT DoCoMo Inc. and Vodafone Group Services Ltd. said last June that they planned to work together on a Linux-based open software platform for mobile phones.
The nonprofit LiMo Foundation is open to any individual or enterprise for an annual fee of between US$40,000 and $800,000 depending on membership class. Membership provides access to and the ability to contribute to source code developed by the group.
A 13-member board of directors will meet four times a year to run the foundation. It will be led by Greg Besio of Motorola as chairman and Kiyohito Nagata of NTT DoCoMo as vice chairman.
Linux is finding its way into an increasing number of cell phones as operators and manufacturers seek to cut development costs, expand compatibility between different models and widen functions available on cell phones.
Two of the foundation members, NEC and Panasonic, have been working together on Linux-based phones for NTT DoCoMo since 2001 and last year they established a joint venture to work on basic design and development of 3G cell phones. Through Esteemo Co. Ltd. they hope to cut development costs. Motorola and Samsung are also working separately on Linux-based cell phones.
Comments (1)
Software for cellphonesBy Justus Schwabedal on November 11, 2007, 9:50 amI'm not well enough of a programer to really make contributions to the issue. However as a user I suggest the need for software compatibility to cellphones currently...
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