Intel and Nokia want much more than cell phones, by their open-source platforms. They hope Meego feed a dizzying array of post-PC devices Nokia and Intel announced at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona that they will combine their Linux platforms. Nokia Maemo and Moblin for Intel platforms will now Meego.
Maemo is the Linux-based operating system that’s flagship Nokia N900 handheld works. Moblin Linux Intel was based on the operating system-based netbooks. It is logical that the mobile giant and the chip-making giant ranks behind a single effort, especially with Linux Google Android mobile OS is based near an edge.
He could cast a shadow at the meetings, if Google board member and president and CEO Paul Otellini of Intel was asked to explain the steps. Otellini was on board at Google since 2004. Of course, Steve Ballmer of Microsoft could not be happy that Intel is working on a competitor phone Windows 7, which has just started at the same event. However, Intel and Nokia have solid business reasons to cooperate Meego.
Intel sees clearly the possibility of interference in the arms of rival low-making power, even if Meego on both Intel-and run ARM chips. However, it is much more than phones. Outlined in the strategy, “said Nokia Meego an unparalleled platform for calculating open from mobile handheld computers, netbooks, tablets, media systems, IP phones, car infotainment and connected TV.
Intel has announced that Meego is an operating system for all on a single processor. It seems long, but in the late 1990s and the beginning of the last decade, they were all talking about the post-PC era, when the Internet would jump out of our screen and a phone number of other connected devices. Remember, the Internet enabled refrigerators? It was an idea ahead of its time. But we begin on the planned explosion of new devices, including netbooks, a new generation of materials such as slate IPAD, e-readers, and even see Internet-enabled digital radios.
It is likely Meego hopes to carve a niche. The mobile phone market dwarfs the PC market, Intel and Nokia are betting that the PC devices on the market for these countless overshadowed by the mobile phone market. Intel Mobile Phone Nokia Mobile World Congress
Kevin Andersonguardian. co. uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to | our terms and More RSS Feeds
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February 15th, 2010
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