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Technology Stocks : Nokia Corp. (NOK) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Eric L who wrote (2783)2/19/2003 2:10:59 PM
From: 49thMIMOMander  Respond to of 9255
 
Funny thing this Motorola-Linux stuff, considering that Linux is/was a very Intel-X86 based
system, born and living from the frustration of MicroWinCrash-and-Doze (which just
did not use what Intel actually had put in the hardware to handle those crashes)

As well as the Motorola-Apple vs Msft-Intel funny legendary thing, starting from the
sillycone up through the metal, architecture + core kernel spreadin into basic IO and APIs..

And maybe especially considering how well some Linux guys have/and are implemented/ing
those real-time multimedia functions, video, MP3,audio, communication, for the x86 platform.,
most of them using information and tools from Intel (that is, all the stuff WinBloath-and-
do-not-open-the-hood provides)

Who knows, maybe they will rewrite all of it to run on a Motorola platfom?? (just for the joy of
editing and watching steaming stuff on their phone??)

Or is it just a matter of getting the GNU compiler, producing somewhat optimized x86 code,
they could swap with Intel?? (sorry, Intel has been pretty good with their plug-in
compilers and tools for x86, when WinBloathing-under-Closed-Hood is not responding)

Ilmarinen

But I guess it is better to pick a cheap PR-path when no path seem to be available.
Additionally there is the chance that some smart, hardworking chinese might do a lot of stuff
as long as Winbloath does not offer them options to stop working on open source stuff.

Well, almost everyone have their chip and ball in a chain, some try to hoist
the chain plus ball over their shoulder



To: Eric L who wrote (2783)2/19/2003 10:09:43 PM
From: Eric L  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 9255
 
WSJ on Qualcomm & Nokia

Hard to figure how these two firms are seen by anyone as direct competitors, but the nutball fringe evidently see it that way.

Nokia is far and away the most successful handset manufacturer ever and is emerging as a strong # 2 to Ericsson in infrastructure.

Qualcomm couldn't hack it in either infra or handsets, but Don Shrock who is about to head off down the primrose lane says:

"We're going to keep the pressure on folks who don't use our chips."

It appears to me that those folks who don't use Qualcomm chips like Nokia and Samsung are putting the pressure on Qualcomm.

>> Nokia, Qualcomm Battle Over 3G Market-Share

David Pringle
Pui-Wing Tam
The Wall Street Journal

Nokia Corp., the world's leading cellphone maker, and Qualcomm Inc., a maker of chips for wireless devices, play in different markets. But the two companies are treading on each other's toes in what is shaping up as one of the biggest rivalries in the wireless world.

Qualcomm is arming Nokia's Asian rivals with the electronics they need to compete with the Finnish company in the nascent market for third generation, or 3G, phones designed to play video clips and tap into the Internet, as well as make voice calls.

Samsung Electronics Co. and LG Electronics Inc. of South Korea and Sanyo Electric Co. of Japan are among those rolling out 3G phones using Qualcomm's chips. While 3G phones made up only about 8% of global sales last year, some believe they are likely to eventually account for the vast majority.

If Nokia is to increase sales in its flagship mobile-phone division much further, analysts believe it must win share from Qualcomm's customers in the 3G market. That, in turn, would limit the San Diego chip maker's own growth prospects.

The two companies are "butting heads," says Michael King, a senior analyst with technology-research firm Gartner Inc. of Stamford, Conn.

Competing on Two Fronts

Aside from Nokia, Qualcomm is one of the few companies in the cellphone industry generating enough profits to comfortably fund the hefty research-and-development effort needed to create handset technology for both the two main 3G standards: Wideband Code Division Multiple Access, known as WCDMA, and CDMA 2000. In the case of WCDMA, these phones also need to be able to run on existing networks using the Global System for Mobile Communications, or GSM, standard. Semiconductor industry executives estimate it costs as much as $400 million to develop the necessary electronics for a GSM/WCDMA phone.

Nokia, which has nearly 50% of the GSM market, says it has shipped 10,000 test units of its first GSM/WCDMA handset, which uses its own chip design. The Finnish company plans a full commercial launch of that phone in the near future. Qualcomm expects handset makers to begin shipping phones using its GSM/WCDMA chips later this year. Both companies are showing 3G phones running video clips at a trade show this week in Cannes, France.

Irwin Jacobs, chief executive officer of Qualcomm, says his company aims to capture 50% of the market for chips to control GSM/WCDMA handsets. However, he acknowledges Nokia is likely to design its own chips and will remain a competitor. "Nokia is such a major force, they could maybe withstand" the trend to buy off-the-shelf chips from external suppliers, such as Qualcomm, Mr. Jacobs says.

Kari Tuutti, a spokesman for Nokia, says his company believes developing its own handset chips helps it make innovative phones with distinctive shapes and features. Nokia regards the major cellphone makers, rather than Qualcomm, as its main competitors, Mr. Tuutti says.

In any case, analysts believe Nokia has the technology, marketing and manufacturing expertise to fend off Qualcomm's customers in the WCDMA market, which is likely to account for the majority of cellphone sales long term. But they say the U.S. company presents a formidable barrier to the Nokia's ambitions in the other standard, CDMA 2000.

The vast majority of the 33 million CDMA 2000 phones shipped last year contained Qualcomm's chips. Nokia, which uses its own CDMA 2000 chip design, had less than 5% of that market, according to investment bank Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. Mr. Tuutti declines to comment on that figure, but he says Nokia intends to make significant market-share gains this year in CDMA 2000.

Analysts say Nokia has failed to keep up with Qualcomm's customers in rolling out CDMA 2000 models with color screens and location-finding abilities.

In addition to their race to develop the best 3G chips, the two companies are fighting a long-running propaganda war to persuade operators to adopt their preferred-network technologies. Most operators have chosen WCDMA, but "there is still an ideological divide between the two companies," says Mark Paxman, a consultant with PA Consulting Group in Cambridge, England.

Software Clashes

Nokia and Qualcomm are also beginning to clash in the cellphone software market. Qualcomm advocates operators use its Brew technology to deliver games and other services to users, while Nokia pushes the Java programming language running atop its own Series 60 handset software.

There seems little prospect of a truce. Despite its weak position in the CDMA 2000 market, Nokia has stubbornly refused to use Qualcomm's chips, continuing to pump euros into developing its own.

Don Shrock, head of Qualcomm's chipset division, says his company is intent on minimizing the Finnish company's market share. "You're either with us or you're against us," says Mr. Shrock. "We're going to keep the pressure on folks who don't use our chips." <<

- Eric -



To: Eric L who wrote (2783)5/3/2003 2:22:10 PM
From: Eric L  Respond to of 9255
 
Symbian OS v7.0s

Don't forget the 's' in v7.0s, which differentiates it from v7.0 which was released and shipped to developers in Q1 2002, and was an upgrade to v6.1.

The new revision has enhancements in 4 areas, outlined below.

I've tacked on the features that differentiate v7.0 from v6.1 to the end of this post along with links to more enhanced overviews.

One key feature not given prominence is the capability of v7.0 and v7.0s to support cdma (3GSM WCDMA or CDMA2000).

>> Symbian Launches Symbian OS v7.0s at Exposium03

Symbian OS enhanced with new networking capabilities, Java MIDP 2.0, multimedia framework & new language variants.

Symbian
London, UK
29 April 2003

symbian.com

Symbian Ltd today announce the launch of the latest version of Symbian OS, the global open industry standard operating system for advanced mobile phones. Symbian OS is licensed by the world’s leading mobile phone manufacturers including Motorola, Nokia, Samsung, Siemens and Sony Ericsson.

The development of this latest Symbian OS release, Symbian OS v.7.0s, demonstrates that Symbian continues to deliver Symbian OS in step with the needs of Symbian OS licensees and the broader mobile industry. Symbian has delivered Symbian OS 7.0s to its licensees earlier this year. Symbian OS licensees will make announcements regarding products based on Symbian OS 7.0s in due course.

Symbian has enhanced Symbian OS in four particular areas:

• Telephony and Networking -- Symbian OS has always had market-leading telephony and networking capabilities. To enhance this further, Symbian OS v7.0s implements Multiple PDP contexts and a Quality of Service framework.

-->Multiple PDP contexts allow users of mobile phones based on Symbian OS v.7.0s to access more than one network service at the same time and with varying QoS. Users can access email whilst simultaneously surfing the web or downloading an application. For network operators, this allows multiple, simultaneous revenue streams from a single handset, each with a different QoS and each with a different charging model.

--> Symbian’s Quality of Service (QoS) framework allow phones to manage network connections intelligently, ensuring the best possible user experience in any given situation. For example, the phone may provide a high bandwidth guaranteed network connection for browsing and a low priority “best effort” network connection for downloading emails. This results in a great browsing experience for the user whilst emails are downloaded in the background.

• Java MIDP 2.0 -- Symbian has upgraded its Java implementation to Java MIDP v2.0, enabling more capable Java applications than previously e.g. games applications which exploit Bluetooth and messaging capabilities. Also, Symbian OS v7.0s deploys Sun’s new Java virtual machine which enables significant improvements in Java application performance. These enhancements improve the user’s experience of using Symbian OS phones as well as encouraging over-the-air download of Java applications offered by network operators and other third parties.

• Multimedia -- Symbian has introduced a lightweight, multi-threaded multimedia framework (MMF) which enables high-performance audio, video and imaging capabilities for Symbian OS applications. The MMF is designed to meet the needs of high performance media-centric applications such as video players, midi engines and particularly games.

• Languages -- Symbian OS v7.0s now offers support for Arabic and Hebrew languages.

“Symbian continues to enhance Symbian OS as the global open industry standard for advanced mobile phones by delivering timely enhancements to Symbian OS in step with needs of Symbian OS licensees and the wider mobile industry,” said Morten Grauballe, VP Product line Management, Symbian. “The enhancements deployed in Symbian OS v7.0s will enable application developers and network operators to offer more advanced, entertaining and productivity-enhancing applications, content and services, making Symbian OS phones even more attractive to users.”

About Symbian

Symbian is a software licensing company which develops and licenses Symbian OS, the global open industry standard operating system for advanced, data-enabled mobile phones.

Symbian has licensed Symbian OS to the world's leading mobile phone manufacturers including Motorola, Nokia, Samsung, Siemens and Sony Ericsson. Publicly announced products based on Symbian OS include:

* BenQ P30
* Samsung SGH-D700
* Siemens SX-1
* NTT DoCoMo FOMA F2051 built by Fujitsu
* Sony Ericsson P800 Smartphone
* Nokia 9200 Communicator range
* Nokia 7650
* Nokia 3650
* Nokia N-Gage

###

Key Features of Symbian OS v7.0 include:

• Mobile Telephony - building on 2.5G GSM / GPRS support in previous versions, Symbian OS v7.0 includes support for multimode and 3G mobile phones, enabling manufacturers to bring out Symbian OS phones worldwide, across all networks, with the ability to reuse their application side software. Includes abstract API for cellular standards:

--> GSM: circuit-switched voice and data (CSD and EDGE ECSD) and packet-based data (GPRS and EDGE EGPRS)

--> CDMA: circuit-switched voice and data and packet-based data (IS-95 and cdma2000 1x)

--> SIM Application Toolkit and SMS.

--> Other standards can be implemented by licensees due to the extensibility of the APIs.

• Mobile Messaging - building on comprehensive integrated messaging environment, Symbian OS v7.0 includes EMS and MMS, providing key revenue generating services for network operators.

• Mobile Networking - building on existing networking capabilities, Symbian OS v7.0 includes both IPv6 and also IPSEC technologies, extending the abilities of mobile phones to communicate securely with each other on a peer to peer basis.

• Mobile Application and Services Development - building on Symbian's lead in support for open Java development, Symbian OS v7.0 incorporates MIDP Java, extending mobile phone capabilities to run the millions of Java applications and services designed specifically for mobile phones, and SyncML, allowing convenient over the air synchronisation of data.

• Support for flexible user interfaces, such as Nokia's Series 60.

• Support for several audio/image formats and a number of low level APIs for games developers.

• Full-strength encryption and certificate management, secure communications protocols (including HTTPS, WTLS and SSL), certificate-based application installation.

• Communication protocols - wide-area networking stacks including TCP, IP version 4, IP version 6 and WAP, and personal area networking stacks including infrared (IrDA), Bluetooth, USB.

• Over-the-air (OTA) SyncML synchronization support.

• International locale support – native Unicode characters, flexible text input framework, and additional font and text formatting (supporting the Unicode Consortium standard).

###

Comprehensive Overview of v7.0 (24 pages) here:

symbian.com

Symbian Company Overview (36 pages) here:

symbian.com

- Eric -