Android is not the only open platform. Here's a quick guide to the mobile, open-source landscape.
If you were looking for an iPhone-killing handset from Google's new mobile strategy, you were definitely hoping for the wrong thing. Google is warmly neutral towards Apple and really has a certain software giant in their sights instead.
Google has announced its long-anticipated cellular play: a mobile-phone software stack called Android.
Microsoft has won its biggest contract to date for the use of its Windows Mobile operating system, in a deal with the US Census Bureau.
Google's Android mobile phone stack will fork into multiple versions, according to Symbian's research chief David Wood.
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.
The search specialist's open-source mobile platform has the telephony industry hot under the collar -- but what will it mean for the average business user?
Microsoft chairman claims mobile phone makers have to catch up to the power of his company's software.
Palm pioneered the smart phone, but if rumours prove true, the Treo maker may not survive as an independent company to watch its creation move from the corner office to the street corner.
The world of smart phones is condensing around fewer platforms, raising the spectre of PC-style commoditisation in the wireless world, according to an analyst report.
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