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I do agree. MeeGo like Tizen now was too dependent on single OEM.
But that is how Intel wants it. They want to sell their chips, so they need mobile OS that can run on x86. That is why Nokia was choosed. They had all to win to focus on MeeGo. While Intel would get market for its chips.
Though calling Nokia unreliable at that time is not fair. Nobody thought that Nokia would choose completely new OS ecosystem that would have nothing do to with anything "Nokia", and would not benefit Nokia ecosystem.
Foreseeing that would require large amount of insanity on behalf of person making prediction.
In other words, organization behind MeeGo had ingrained risk, but very very very small. Our lose that in the end it was too large.
On the other hand N9 and N95 prove that coop between Nokia and Intel was good enough to create wonders. Shame on Nokia CEO for not using it.
Tizen runs on x86 and ARM (Samsung and Huawei); Panasonic and NEC are also members of the TA.
http://www.tizenassociation.org/en/
So Tizen will run on millions of devices, in all shapes and forms.
Edited 2012-08-24 10:07 UTC




Member since:
2010-06-08
I'm not talking about Nokia, I'm talking about Meego project which was too dependent on Nokia. That spelled its doom the moment Nokia's mood changed. Being so dependent on an unreliable supporter can't be called success. Mer was created to address this problem.
Edited 2012-08-23 21:33 UTC