• On MovieTome: Leaked images from TRANSFORMERS 2?

February 4, 2008 3:40 PM PST

Newsmaker: LiMo chief talks rivals, Nokia, and mobile Linux

See all Newsmakers
  • Print
LiMo chief talks rivals, Nokia, and mobile Linux
Related Stories

Key mobile Linux platform out in March

February 4, 2008

Lips Forum releases mobile Linux specs

December 12, 2007

Google launches its cell phone ambitions

November 6, 2007

Second open Linux phone goes on sale

July 9, 2007
Related Blogs

Nokia acquires open-source firm Trolltech


January 28, 2008
On Monday, the LiMo Foundation, an industry consortium that wants to put Linux technology onto mobile handsets, announced the first release of its shared platform.

The foundation also announced the immediate availability of the application programming interface (API) set for the platform. Prior to the announcements, ZDNet UK spoke with LiMo's executive director, Morgan Gillis, to discuss the platform, LiMo's rivals, and Nokia's entry into the organization.

Q: Could you go into further detail on Monday's announcements?
Gillis: We're announcing that the first release of the platform will be available in March. We are also announcing that the APIs will be available immediately on the public Web site. What we're doing in this phase is to push the platform out to the whole industry in order to provide, particularly (to) developers, an opportunity to look inside the platform and formulate their own plans to target the LiMo platform as a channel to market.

All LiMo members can implement the platform in their phones and, obviously, we have a good number of handset makers inside LiMo. The first release of the platform is made up of technologies that were created by the six LiMo founder members (Motorola, NEC, NTT DoCoMo, Panasonic, Samsung, and Vodafone). So the technology within the first release has already been deployed in handsets--it started going into handsets from about three years ago.

What LiMo is doing with Release 1 is to reintegrate that technology to form the LiMo platform. In all of the major areas of the platform, this is technology which has been extensively market-proven.

Could you expand on the API set announcement you have made?
Gillis: We're doing something quite radical--we're offering the API specifications out to the general public from Monday. This will enable anybody, in any corner of the industry, from large companies that are not inside (LiMo) yet to small developers, to look inside the LiMo platform and begin preparing.

If you want to implement the LiMo platform, do you need to be a member of the organization?
Gillis: Yes, from the (manufacturer) side. In order to ship the LiMo platform onto another customer you need to be a member; to develop for it, you don't.

One member of the LiMo Foundation, who asked to remain nameless, has referred to the LiMo's program as "one of certification." This company claims that its contributions to the platform have not yet been approved. Does this ring true with you?
Gillis: That is not a comment that makes a great deal of sense to me. The handset companies that are inside LiMo are each developing handsets using the LiMo platform, and there is a LiMo approval program for handsets which implement the platform. That program is running very smoothly--I don't think anyone is waiting for certification.

LiMo's role is unification of mobile Linux, and we mean unification in the true sense, so we really do welcome and accommodate all parts of the industry.

Analysts have noted that Nokia, by buying the LiMo member Trolltech, has entered the consortium "through the back door." Do you view that acquisition in this way?
Gillis: There are further stages to go before anyone could really say that with certainty; the acquisition of Trolltech needs to be (approved by regulatory authorities). Then, potentially, Nokia would be the owner of a member of LiMo--that would be the situation.

Do you think the Trolltech acquisition would lessen Nokia's reliance on Symbian?
Gillis: I would tend to look at it with a slightly broader, more strategic view. We can all see that Nokia has, for the past two to three years, been concentrating its focus and investments and acquisitions on the user-experience layer--both the user interface and, through (Nokia's Internet services platform) Ovi, the content as well. As a strategy, that complements what we're doing at LiMo quite perfectly.

What LiMo does is to focus exclusively on middleware and to create the middleware platform within an open and transparent governance model that is comfortable for the whole industry. I think Nokia's strategy is clear, their focus is clear, and they have said themselves they are moving into a cross-platform mode, which at least implies less dependence on any one underlying platform.

Are you happy with Nokia's method of entry into LiMo?
Gillis: LiMo's role is unification of mobile Linux, and we mean unification in the true sense, so we really do welcome and accommodate all parts of the industry. We began with four large handset companies and two very large operators just one year ago. At the time, some people said you can't get big industry leaders to work together in a productive way. Through the announcements we're making, we're proving that the LiMo model does work. It allows major industry forces to collaborate productively while also leaving them free to compete very fully in other areas of technology--the areas which sit above the value line.

More Newsmakers

CONTINUED: LiMo vs. Lips...
Page 1 | 2

See more CNET content tagged:
Morgan Gillis, Mobile Linux, Trolltech, Nokia Corp., API

advertisement

Latest tech news headlines

Resource center from CNET News sponsors
Aligning CIO & CEO visions
What CIOs need to know

Click Here!
It's a simple truth. The closer you and your CEO see things, the greater your chance for success. Our exclusive report can help you get there—and help your business grow. Get the report featuring the views of 765 CEOs on innovation. learn more

Click Here!
What CEOs think: Innovation Insights for CIOs

Learn How CIOs can deliver strategic success for their enterprises

The New CIO: Beyond Technology

Learn how CIOs become heroes

Podcast: Chris Gorog of Napster

Learn about the impact of technology in strategy execution

The future of the Enterprise

Read more about tomorrow's organization

CIO Vision Series:Innovating within a retail industry disrupted by the Web

Video: CIO of Virgin Entertainment Group, Robert Fort

RSS Feeds

Add headlines from CNET News to your homepage or feedreader.

More feeds available in our RSS feed index.

Markets

Market news, charts, SEC filings, and more

Related quotes

Dow Jones Industrials (-7.70%) -679.95 8,149.09
S&P 500 (-8.93%) -80.03 816.21
NASDAQ (-8.95%) -137.50 1,398.07
CNET TECH (-7.06%) -77.09 1,014.20
  Symbol Lookup
advertisement

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right