LiMo launches mobile Linux handsets

The LiMo Foundation launched its first mobile handsets, which run on the Linux-based Mobile LiMo Platform, at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona yesterday.

The Motorola Razr2 V8, one of the current LiMo devices.

Morgan Gillis, executive director of the LiMo Foundation said in a statement: "The breadth of the initial wave of LiMo handsets -- 18 models from seven vendors -- consolidates LiMo's role as the unifying force within Mobile Linux."

The LiMo Foundation was established by Motorola, NEC, NTT DoCoMo, Panasonic, Samsung and Vodafone at the beginning of 2007, with the goal of delivering an open, Linux-based platform for mobile devices.

Members of LiMo are hoping to create proprietary applications on their open platform. The LiMo Foundation previously made application programming interface (API) specifications public on 4 February.

Kiyohito Nagata of NTT DoCoMo, chair of LiMo Foundation, said: "The mobile industry is embracing Linux and openness as the key enablers of lower device development costs, increased flexibility and quicker time to market for innovative services of all kinds."

Since its inception, the LiMo Foundation welcomed LG, McAfee, ARM and Ericsson as members.

Some of the commercial devices running LiMo include the Motorola Razr2 V8 and Motorokr Z6. The launch also included a number of prototype phones, the LG LiMo, Opal(m) from Aplix and the Purple Magic from Purple Labs.

The LiMo Foundation is one of several industry consortia seeking to create a standardised approach to Linux-based handsets, with rivals including the Linux Phone Standards Forum (LiPS) and the Google-led Open Handset Alliance, which plans to release Android.

Advertisement

Talkback 2 comments

    L-I-N-U-X spells Linux, moronRex Alfie Lee -- 15/02/08 (in reply to #320095463)

    This is the operating system that will be running 90% or more of the communicating devices within 10 years. Without it nothing will be communicating at all.

    Now go put your head back in the bucket it has been in for the last 5 years.

Add your opinion


Latest Videos

Blogs

  • David Braue Will Rudd's bush backhaul bonanza deliver?
    Rural areas will be welcoming the government's decision to put its money where its politicising is, funnelling $250m into a regional fibre upgrade to six rural centres. Remedying over a decade of near-neglect at the hands of telecoms privatisation, the investment could be the firmest step yet for Labor's NBN dream — but with inevitable political questions and a looming election, Rudd and Conroy need to deliver, and quickly, to preserve the NBN's credibility.
  • Array Doing for AV what VoIP did for telephony
    Sydney-based start-up Audinate is making traditional analog cabling obsolete in favour of TCP/IP-based networking technology. And it's doing a pretty good job so far, with its technology used by World Youth Day and the Sydney Opera House.
  • Array WiMax in Australia: Part two
    WiMax could be the standard that drives the next phase of mobile broadband, it provides an opportunity for players wanting to establish a pure IP network to carry voice and data effectively — but is this what operators want?
  • More blogs »

Tags

Back to top

Featured