The next great operating systems wars are about to be fought, as traditional computing companies collide with teams representing the mobile phone industry.
Google's Android mobile phone stack will fork into multiple versions, according to Symbian's research chief David Wood.
Android is not the only open platform. Here's a quick guide to the mobile, open-source landscape.
The LiMo Foundation released the first full version of its mobile phone platform on Monday.
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.
Given the hype around anything with a single-letter prefix m-commerce, e-learning, iPhone last year's speculation over a Google "gPhone" sent the blogosphere into overdrive. The Android mobile phone platform that Google actually launched, however, took things in quite a different direction.
Google's recent announcement of Android has sparked a debate over whether the mobile Linux platform will prove more secure than Apple's proprietary iPhone.
Google's Andy Rubin talks nuts and bolts about the Linux-based phone software, the lessons of Sidekick, and the beauty of the iPhone.
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