Thursday | 8 January, 2009
LinuxWorld.com.au

Mobile Linux

News
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    Unlocked Android phone: Pricey outside the U.S. 09/12/2008 07:33:00

    Google has started selling an unlocked Android phone, targeted at developers.
    Just in time for the end-of-year shopping season, Google is offering an unlocked Android phone, targeted at developers but available to anyone. While the phone might be attractive to consumers and developers alike in the U.S., its price in other countries is putting off even developers.
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    Apple's iPhone gets Linux 02/12/2008 08:43:00

    Linux 2.6 kernel has been ported to Apple's iPhone platform, with support for the first and second generation iPhones, says blogger.
    Hackers have managed to load Linux on to Apple's iPhone.
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    Huawei to launch Android and Symbian smartphones next year 10/11/2008 08:09:00

    Chinese network company Huawei Technologies is planning to launch smartphones based on the Android and Symbian operating systems in the first half of 2009
    Chinese network company Huawei Technologies is planning to launch smartphones based on the Android and Symbian operating systems in the first half of 2009, according to James Chen, director of marketing for the company's terminals division. It will also launch a new embedded 3G module at the GSMA Mobile Asia Congress this month, he said.
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    Android may not need antivirus software, researcher says 07/11/2008 12:19:00

    SMobile released what it says is the first antivirus software for Android, but one analyst said it's probably not necessary.
    Antivirus developer SMobile released software this week to protect users of the G1 Android phone, although one security analyst wondered if people really need it.
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    Android apps market is a hit, Google says 06/11/2008 12:04:00

    The average user of the Android-based G1 phone has downloaded 14 applications, out of 200 now available on the Android Marketplace, a Google executive said.
    The average user of the Android-based G1 phone has downloaded 14 applications, out of 200 now available on the Android Marketplace, a Google executive said Wednesday.
Features
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    Ultraportable laptops: Their rise and possible fall 22/08/2008 12:24:00

    Whether or not the current generation of ultraportable laptops is a success, we're at the beginning of the move to smaller, more connective devices.
    For some users, the new generation of ultraportable notebooks comes close to embodying the Holy Grail for road warriors. Their laptop-like keyboards make them more usable for typing tasks than smart phones, but they are lighter and cheaper than traditional laptops. The original Asus Eee PC, for instance, cost about US$400 and weighed about two pounds when it was introduced last October.
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    New mobile browsers bringing real Web to handhelds 22/07/2008 10:24:53

    'The browser wars are back,' says one developer
    A new generation of mobile Web browsers is finally making the Web a reality on handheld devices.
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    New generation of mobile browsers put the whole Web in your hands 22/07/2008 11:19:09

    Compact, powerful, innovative, new browsers give you more choices than ever before.
    Compact, powerful, innovative, new browsers give you more choices than ever before.
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    Report: OLPC may eventually switch from Linux to Windows XP 24/04/2008 07:50:34

    Insistence on open source scares people away, Negroponte says
    One day after the resignation of the One Laptop Per Child's president was publicly revealed, the educational project's founder and chairman says the group's XO laptop may evolve to use only Windows XP as the operating system, with open-source educational apps such as its home-built Sugar running on top.
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    OLPC low-power laptop empowers and inspires 23/04/2008 08:28:44

    2008 Green 15: XO's innovative ecofriendly design raises the bar for green computing while opening new opportunities for underprivileged children
    When the One Laptop Per Child (OLPC) program was first announced in 2005, media attention centered on two aspects: the US$100 price tag and the humanitarian nature of the project. Three years later, the environmental genius of these award-winning laptops still not only burns bright but even inspires copycats. Vendors such as Asustek and Via are working to bring their own low-cost, low-power computing devices to emerging markets and education.
Interviews
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    Why major mobile handset makers are riding with LiMo 20/03/2008 11:23:39

    The executive director of the LiMo Foundation discusses his group's efforts to create and establish an open handset platform built on Linux
    The LiMo Foundation was formed on January 2007 as a consortium of mobile industry companies joining together to create for handsets an open and standardized software platform based on Linux. Their goal is to deliver an open handset format that will become more widely accepted and used over closed, proprietary platforms. The foundation's major founders include Motorola, NEC, NTT DoCoMo, Panasonic Mobile Communications, Samsung Electronics and Vodafone. These companies and other members share leadership and decision making.
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    phpBB3 takes giant strides from predecessor 05/02/2008 11:17:14

    Few surfers can claim that they never have visited a phpBB site. We speak to the key players of phpBB and find out why this version is better than V 2.2.
    As the world gets smaller, security threats and spam seem only to grow. PhpBB is the open source Internet Forum package that underlies a majority of the online forums on the Internet and its creators take their motto "creating communities" very seriously. All communities need to interact freely and safely, and although a long time coming, the latest release, phpBB3, has several increased security measures, as well as enhanced collaboration features and mobile optimisation.
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    The world according to Linus 29/01/2008 23:40:29

    Computerworld catches up with the man behind Linux, Linus Torvalds, at Linux.conf.au
    Computerworld catches up with the man behind Linux, Linus Torvalds, at Linux.conf.au
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    Q&A with Google Android Developer 12/11/2007 09:11:05

    Google seeks to build a "vibrant third-party developer community" for its Android mobile platform, Google co-founder Rich Miner says.
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    Luke Schierer discusses Pidgin, Open source and life 10/10/2007 07:04:03

    Pidgin developer discusses the project and also offers advice on why some open source projects fail.
    With over 3 million estimated users, Pidgin is an open source instant messaging program for Windows, Linux, BSD, and other Unix platforms. It works with AIM, ICQ, Jabber/XMPP, MSN Messenger, Yahoo, Bonjour, Gadu-Gadu, IRC, Novell GroupWise Messenger, QQ, Lotus Sametime, SILC, SIMPLE, MySpaceIM, and Zephyr.
Opinions
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    Nokia goes after Google with open-source Symbian 24/10/2008 12:51:00

    The competition to gain our hearts and money in exchange for a mobile phone just got hotter
    Nokia has announced its Symbian mobile operating system will join the likes of Android and will become an open source operating system. The announcement was made Tuesday at the Smartphone Show in London and is seen as a bid to maintain and possibly grow its developer base. This move comes at the same time Google makes its Android source code available to developers. The Nokia news contradicts previous reports on Nokia adopting Android OS.
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    Symbian deal will open up mobile platform market 27/06/2008 10:58:13

    Competition heats up in the open mobile platform arena
    The global battle to control the smarts in your smartphone escalated this week when some of the combatants redeployed their forces in two big moves.
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    Inside Google's mobile future 28/02/2008 07:06:50

    Google's foray into the handheld OS realm follows a path well trodden by others, but will it succeed?
    Android is Google's foray into the handheld OS realm. It follows a path trodden by -- among others -- Symbian's Quartz, the SavaJe operating system, and J2ME. In fact, one of Android's stated goals is to overcome some of J2ME's shortcomings. Whether or not Android succeeds, either at that specific goal, or in general, remains to be seen.
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    Goodbye, notebook; hello 'Web tablet' 29/01/2008 10:36:22

    "The notebook computer is doomed."
    The notebook computer is doomed. OK, that's a little strong. And as one of the people who worked on the first laptop PC, the GRiD Systems Compass Computer Model 1101, there will always be a soft spot in my heart for mobile PCs. But as we move into the era of infocentricity, defined by Web 2.0 network services, the "everyone gets a CPU" model needs to be replaced by "everyone has access to an interface to the Web."
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