Nokia has flatly denied any plans to go Android and refreshes its commitment for the Symbian platform. Nokia is forever married to the Symbian platform and it's going to be a long shot if we can ever see a Nokia handset with an Android OS in it. Nokia bought out the remaining 52% of Symbian last year for a reportedly €264 million ($368 million) big bucks. Nokia is also promoting its own non-profit Symbian Foundation which combined several different operating systems (Symbian OS, S60, UIQ, MOAP) and made the whole thing open source (read: free, just like Android). If Nokia gives in to Android as the better platform than Symbian, it will continue to lose market share in the growing smartphone market. It looks like it's Symbian or nothing for Nokia. Do you think Nokia should just drop Symbian, specifically the S60 platform, for a better one? Read more in our articles including "Why Nokia won't divorce Symbian for Android?" and "Infinix HOT 70 priced in the Philippines".
Nokia has flatly denied any plans to go Android and refreshes its commitment for the Symbian platform. Nokia is forever married to the Symbian platform and it's going to be a long shot if we can ever see a Nokia handset with an Android OS in it.
Nokia bought out the remaining 52% of Symbian last year for a reportedly €264 million ($368 million) big bucks. Nokia is also promoting its own non-profit Symbian Foundation which combined several different operating systems (Symbian OS, S60, UIQ, MOAP) and made the whole thing open source (read: free, just like Android). If Nokia gives in to Android as the better platform than Symbian, it will continue to lose market share in the growing smartphone market.
Our coverage of symbian s60 includes: "Why Nokia won't divorce Symbian for Android?"; "Infinix HOT 70 priced in the Philippines"; "Huawei nova 16 Series confirmed for June 1, design officially revealed". Each article provides unique insights and information.