Open Source Is Not The Only Answer....
As any sane person would realise, simply slapping code into the Open Source bucket isn't enough to build an eco-system, and it's good to hear from both John Forsyth of Symbian speaking at OSCON, and Janne Jalkannen (via Nokia Conversations, but speaking on a personal level) that this is point appears to be well understood in the respective companies.
The conjecture is pretty simple. You work with an open source project because (a) you have to because that's your job or (b) because you want to. Symbian at the moment has a rather huge amount in the first category, while there are significantly less in the second category. For a truly successful open source project, they need to be in balance.
"The problem with Symbian is that very, very few people touch it for fun. So I believe that while we can open source it, it is going to be very difficult to get people participate out of their own free will, unless we are prepared to make very serious refactorings to the entire system.
"Still, it is going to keep Symbian in the game a little longer. While many people dislike it (just go to any Finnish IT newspaper discussion board to verify this), the fact is that it does carry a significant amount of gold home every day. So we must be doing something right, and my bank account would very much like to us keep doing that."
More at Nokia Conversations.
Published by Ewan Spence at 10:16 UTC, July 24th
Categories: Links of Interest, Developer
Platforms: S60 3rd Edition
News Discussion
As the excerpt says, the Symbian phones have lots of commercial releases written by professional development teams, but very few apps from unpaid enthusiasts.
The Linux tablets on the other hand have virtually no commercially-written apps (there are some exceptions but not many), but they are filled to bursting with open software written mostly by volunteers.
What makes it interesting is that neither platform has got it completely right, on the tablets you end up missing the polished commercial stuff (especially games), while on the phones you miss all the free (as in legally free) niche stuff.
An easy to use software market (perhaps a revamped version of Download) could perhaps help round out the problems of both platforms: it would allow a very easy distribution channel for freeware on Symbian, and something similar would allow commercial software more of a presence on the Linux tablets.
In the same lines of "The Truth, The Whole Truth, and Nothing But The Truth", some would argue that Open Source [B]is indeed[/B] the only answer - it's just not the [B][I]whole[/I][/B] answer. I expect that's what was meant by the title.
[URL="http://blogs.forum.nokia.com/blog/nathan-eagles-forum-nokia-blog/business-opportunities-services/2008/07/25/android-symbian-merger-predicted"]http://blogs.forum.nokia.com/blog/nathan-eagles-forum-nokia-blog/business-opportunities-services/2008/07/25/android-symbian-merger-predicted[/URL]
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