Hot on the heels of our post about rumours that Google is designing a gPhone to show off nike shoes the power of its Android mobile operating system, comes news of a potential tie up between the search engine and Symbian, the market leader in smartphone operating systems.
Symbian is the granddaughter of the famous Psion operating system that brought personal digital assistants to the masses in the early 90s. Under pressure from Palm and other PDA makers, bape hoodies Psion was eventually forced out of the PDA market but sold its operating system, updated to work on smartphones and renamed Symbian,Nike Air Force Ones to a consortium of technology companies including Nokia, Ericsson and Motorola.
Earlier this year, however, Nokia announced its intention to buy out its partners and relaunch Symbian as an open, royalty-free operating system for smartphones.
Sound familiar? Last year, Google made Nike Dunks a similar announcement. In a widely anticipated move into the mobile surfing market, the company has developed an open, royalty-free operating system for smartphones called Android.
But there is one big difference between these two operating systems. While Android has yet to see the light of day in a commercial phone, Symbian has a 60 per cent market share in the smarphone market air force ones (Windows Mobile has an 11 per cent share and other Linux-based operating systems have 12 per cent).
Go to have Lunch!
That should make Android and Symbian arch competitors but they actually collaborate on applications such as Google Maps and search. And today Symbian’s chief executive Nigel Clifford has raised the possibility of collaborating with Google on an even deeper level, on the operating system itself.
That could be a formidable partnership. Air Jordan Shoes wants to open up the mobile surfing market so that it can make money from ads served on the search results pages. Exactly how this will work, nobody knows but Google must surely have something interesting up its sleeve to have gone to this length to make it happen.
This goal seems to perfectly dovetail with the aims of Symbian’s new owners Nokia, who want to sell more phones while also grabbing a share of the mobile advertising market.
But don’t expect a transatlantic love-in just yet. Air Jordan .The one fly in the ointment is that Google will almost certainly decide it has enough momentum, expertise and arrogance to go it alone.Nike Air Force 1 And in that case, it won’t need Symbian.
Justin Mullins
New Scientist consultant
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