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- what is symbian, Defination and detail description of symbian os.
what is symbian, Defination and detail description of symbian os.
- By Article Author
- Published Tuesday 27th 2009
- Mobile Phone Technology
- Unrated
Mobile Operating system. What is symbian OS?
Symbian OS
is an open source operating system for mobile phones primarily used on Nokia
advanced or data enabled smart phones. Symbian OS runs exclusively on ARM
processors and has evolved from Psion's EPOC which was developed as a
rudimentary operating system for early electronic organizers. The Psion EPOC OS
was refered to EPOC16 beginning in the late 1990's to help distinguish it from
the newer 32bit Operating system EPOC32, which eventually became Symbian OS.
Psion software created a joint venture with several mobile hardware
manufacturers, Ericsson®, Motorola®, and Nokia® called Symbian and eventually
took on the name Symbian Software, renaming EPOC32 Symbian OS.
The key
advantage of EPOC32 over its 16bit predecessor is the ability to multi-task,
perform multiple functions at once. In newer devices, this might mean being
able to surf the web using the phone and not lose your content when answering
an incoming call.
Many third
party manufacturers were able to license the 32bit EPOC OS for their organizers
and other mobile data devices. Since the late 1990's,Symbian OS has become one
of the most popular mobile device operating systems available.
Several
device manufacturers from Nokia® to Sony/Ericsson® have committed to the new
and open project that Symbian has announced for its mobile phone operating
system, Symbian OS. Wireless carriers such as AT&T® and T-Mobile® have also
pledged support for the project.
Symbian OS
has also adapted to include soft features such as global positioning software
(GPS) which will become as common as a camera in the very near future. Service
providers and other companies could then publish location based services that
interact with the GPS found in a mobile phone, appearing on the display once
the user is near an application.
In recent
years, Microsoft® and Palm® have been the most discussed providers of operating
system software for mobile phones, but Symbian has been powering phones for
quite some time. The company announced in 2008 that the operating system would
become open source very soon, allowing other vendors and even users themselves
to add to the already widely established Symbian OS. The support for the much
established mobile platform is far and wide, though much of the press lately
has centered around Apple's iPhone® and other offerings including the rumored
Google Android OS for mobile devices.
It will be interesting to see what hardware is developed for use with Symbian OS in the future to compete with phones like the iPhone® and the latest mobile devices from Palm® and Microsoft®.