Categories

Nokia and Intel merge Maemo and Moblin

Does this make the OS choice simpler for consumers, or more ridiculous?

Nokia logo2 Intel logo More operating system news at the MWC today as chipset maker Intel and phone giant Nokia declare a merger of their Moblin and Maemo platforms to create MeeGo. Intel will also source HSPA tech from Nokia and the relationship is likely to see many more Intel chips powering Nokia smartphones.

Developed over a five-year cycle, Maemo shipped on Nokia internet tablets since 2005. It stepped across into the high-end smartphone arena last quarter with version 5 for the N900, a hyper-phone for nerds. Moblin (Mobile Linux) has been around since 2007, appearing on netbooks and mobile internet devices.

MeeGo will be open source and hosted by the Linux Foundation, aimed at supporting a range of device types, it will appear on very high-end smartphones, netbooks, tablets and connected televisions towards the end of the year.

A fine pedigree or a bastard child? Time will tell. It makes sense to scale-up to compete and the two companies could become powerful allies. Both parents here contribute powerful functionality, but providing tools and apps that customers want to use will be key to running alongside the other big names.

MeeGo? Apart from sounding like a Pokémon and further challenging my spelling-check, it shows you how hard it’s becoming to name a product.

Like to know more? press release here

Nokia N900 review

Nerdy heaven from Finland

Nokia N900 Physically, the N900 has a QWERTY side-slide design, a little on the chubby side but still manageable in a pocket. It has a 3.5″ screen and is very definitely an internet tablet with phone capabilities, in that order.

The keypad feels a little cramped and supplemental, with the resistive touchscreen taking centre stage and looking the business. Packing a massive 800×480 pixels, it providing sharp video quality with an ambient light sensor built in. Supplied with a stylus, my fingernail worked pretty well, the best resistive screen I’ve used.

Inside, a 600Mhz processor backed up by 32GB of storage provides the oomph, with extra power dedicated to graphics and it shows. Maemo 5 is a visually delightful interface, but a little quirky to get used to. For example you swirl to zoom; clockwise in, anticlockwise out. The four paged home screen is completely customisable with widgets, shortcuts and web bookmarks, and can be skinned or themed as required. It’s also nice that menus can be repositioned and that web links show a thumbnail of the associated page.

I struggled to find any application that isn’t available, all the social networking sites are supported and Flash 9.4 plus a browser built from the same code as Mozilla Firefox provided a fantastic internet experience. WiFi, GPS and a 3.5mm jack that doubles as TV-out, are enhanced by an infrared port. This allows third party applications to act as a universal remote, folding in an extra level of geek-chic to the N900.

A hardcore and expensive device, more than a smartphone it rewards users that take the time needed to learn all its secrets. The deign brief ‘tablet computer plus phone functions’ means the tech savvy (geeky) will adore the N900, but other smartphones have a shallower learning curve for the masses.

Unleash the N900

New Maemo-powered beast

Nokia Chief Executive Olli-Pekka Kallasvuo announced in a speech that N900 was to begin shipping on Tuesday, reported by Reuters.

Although the Finnish giant has maintained a roughly 40% market share overall, the battle is tough against Apple and RIM in their home territories. Top-notch smartphones (which the N900 appears to be, fingers crossed) are vital for Nokia to claw back market share in the tough North American market.

Industry analysts have reported expectations that Nokia’s market share in high-end devices will slip. Not if they can help it.

Maemo 5 demo

I might be fickle but so is everyone else

You’re safe to ignore the words and just watch the funky video.

Maemo is Nokia’s slimmed down version of the Debian operating system. Debian itself based on a Linux kernel and the GNOME gui. There, that’s non-techy readers asleep, but I say to just watch the video.

Built by Nokia for smartphones and internet tablets, Maemo 5 premiers on the ‘N900 mobile computer’.

Android OS has proved there are real competitors to Windows Mobile and iPhone OS. Here comes another one and it looks darn sexy.

Like to know more? Nokia Maemo