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IW: Closed iPhone Opens Door for Linux

Apple came down on the side of a closed architecture for the iPhone, and that could open the door for a new breed of open architecture Linux phones, according too Tom Yager at InfoWorld on Wednesday.

The Linux crowd has been craving an open Linux-based mobile phone ever since Sharp killed the Zaurus. At LinuxWorld 2007, attendees were looking favorably on Apple's closed architecture decision as an opportunity for them. "The whole exhibit floor had the feel of a mining town that was just getting its footing," Mr. Yager wrote.

Motorola is toying with the idea and demonstrated Eclipse development tools at the Expo, but can't seem to make a decision one way or the other. Palm, on the other hand, is where the Linux action is, according to Mr. Yager. In addition, a company called Openmoko has shown a US$300 open source phone called "Neo" that Mr. Yager described as "gorgeous." It has sold out.

The whole issue is based on whether an open source Linux phone, a highly coveted playtoy for hackers, can be successful as a mass market product. Certainly the pace of development and interaction with the vendor could, in principle, outgrow the iPhone, but there are dangers that the manufacturer won't be able to control the messaging and the product profile. Everyone in the Linux community is eager to try, but Motorola is hesitant and Palm is desperate. In any case, opportunity is knocking.

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A guest said: (hide)

The story has the whole reason why a Linux phone is a disasterous idea.

Hackers.

And the Enterprise world worries about the "closed" iPhone?

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Mikuro said:

member since 15 Jun 2002 with 457 posts, unranked, send him a message or view his profile

Why would "hackers" even be a problem for a phone? You'll notice that PC hackers have not brought down the Internet. The way people talk about cell phone security, you'd think the batteries were made of nitroglycerin.

I think an open phone would have many of the same advantages of an open OS. The big difference is that even "closed" OSes (Mac OS X, Windows) are actually quite open, allowing third-party developers to make apps on the same level as the OS makers, whereas closed phones are severely more limited.

I certainly think there's an opportunity here. Irrational fear might keep it down for a while, but I think it will change the market, if only be influencing the "closed" companies like Apple and making them open up a bit more.

I'd certainly be interested in a phone with more robust third-party app support than the iPhone. No single company is ever going to address 100% of my needs. I'd bet the same is true with most people. Consumers are simply accustomed to mediocrity in this market. Apple has raised the bar, and now others will raise it further.

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j.martellaro said:

member since 07 Dec 2006 with 97 posts, TMO Staff, send him a message or view his profile

Guest nailed it. An iPhone might eventually crack the enterprise, but a mobile phone that users can hack

will never make it in the business world. Once its reputation is ruined there, consumers will shy away.

-JM

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A guest said: (hide)

Hang on, if you are an IT department you can develop custom apps for your linux phone probably using the same developer tools as on normal linux. It's linux so you can lock down the phones that you give to your employees...I don't see where the security issues are. If I am a hacker would I go for the millions of Windows phones out there, or the couple of thousand that will be running linux?

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Intruder said:

member since 07 Jul 2004 with 3149 posts, TMO Mac Specialist, send him a message or view his profile

No, you would go after the much more dominant Symbian phones. They FAR outnumber Windows phones.

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geoduck said:

member since 30 Dec 2003 with 1922 posts, unranked, send him a message or view his profile

Doesn't this ignore that most people don't give a tinkers d@mn what OS their phone runs on. I would wager that outside of the geek world the real question for most people is does it work.

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