Linked by fran on Tue 26th Jul 2011 21:45 UTC
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Here is a link to another article that addresses this question: http://mozillalinks.org/2011/07/mozilla-boot-to-gecko-project-aims-...
In a nutshell, it will be 100% open source, unlike the corporate alternatives.
... when there is iOS, Android, Phone 7, webOS, Blackberry QNX + plus all the legacy mobile OS's.
Hum, let me think - - with so much choice in the market are any manufacturers really go to put this on a phone? Not really a good time to launch a new mobile OS is it?
Hum, let me think - - with so much choice in the market are any manufacturers really go to put this on a phone? Not really a good time to launch a new mobile OS is it?
...and none are open source.
I get your point about entering a crowded market but everyone benefits from competition and choice. If this could prove to be a drop in replacement for android (with android app compatibility) then I think there would be a market for it. It would be mostly a geek thing but a market none the less.
Well when you consider the size of the potential market relative to the development costs there is probably room for a profitable niche OS offering.
Bada does pretty well in certain markets for example and is just part of Samsungs offerings obviously. I could see a niche for some exotic OS on some interesting platform, but then again I also bought a Nokia N900 




Member since:
2010-06-06
... when there is iOS, Android, Phone 7, webOS, Blackberry QNX + plus all the legacy mobile OS's.
Hum, let me think - - with so much choice in the market are any manufacturers really go to put this on a phone? Not really a good time to launch a new mobile OS is it?