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Newsletter 37
Nokia bids to widen appeal of Symbian mobile OS
Nokia’s announcement that it is to buy out its partners’ share in the Symbian mobile phone operating system, and gift it to a new non-for-profit organisation called the Symbian Foundation, is being welcomed by analysts as a positive move for the telecoms industry. Ovum for instance says it will encourage adoption and collaboration. Nokia already held a 48 per cent interest in Symbian, but some believe this made even its partners nervous about giving it full-hearted support, leaving open the opportunity for Linux especially, and to some extent Microsoft Mobile, to gain market share. Nokia is believed to have paid £209 million to complete the acquisition. It says future funding will be provided by participants in the foundation. It aims to develop “the most complete mobile software offering available in open source”, which will be made available over the next two years under what it is calling the Eclipse Public License (EPL). Other original partners were Psion, Nokia, Motorola, Ericsson and Panasonic, but Psion sold out its share some years ago. Founding members of the foundation are LG Electronics, Motorola, Nokia, NTT DOCOMO, Samsung, Sony Ericsson, STMicroelectronics, Texas Instruments and Vodafone.
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