Three More Linux mobile Phones Coming in Japan 53
An anonymous reader writes "NEC and Panasonic have developed three Linux-powered 3G mobile phones to be introduced in Japan in the coming months -- NEC's N900iL, NEC's N901iC, and Panasonic's P901i. Of the three, only NEC's N900iL is currently shipping. The N900iL is a dual-network 3G/VoIP handset that works as a 3G mobile phone (using DoCoMo's W-CDMA/FOMA technologies), VoIP terminal, or both simultaneously. All three phones are based on the Linux 3G mobile phone software platform announced by NEC and Panasonic earlier this week."
Re:But do they run Windows? (Score:1)
"-- Ok, but does it run Linux?
-- Yes... in Japan!"
This is an article where two legendary memes meet! What a nice achievement.
Re:But do they run Windows? (Score:1)
Re:But do they run Windows? (Score:3, Funny)
Unfortunately (Score:1, Informative)
Unfortunately, it takes a long time for devices like these to make it to the US, if they make it at all.
Re:Unfortunately (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Unfortunately (Score:2)
That is why for
Re:Unfortunately (Score:2)
Re:Unfortunately (Score:1)
Re:Unfortunately (Score:1)
I'll take the US vs Finland though, just to make it fair.
From your link:
Finland has a population of 5.2 Million people, 67% of which live in _towns_.
That means you have (5.2M x
Please take your 3G phone out to the 33% of your country NOT
Re:Unfortunately (Score:2)
Add to that our obsession with summer cottages in remote regions that *must* be served, so that our yuppies and Nokia executives can stay in touch with the office during vacations, and you will find that 90% coverage is required from a competiti
Re:Unfortunately (Score:2, Interesting)
Wrong, Wrong, Wrong and Wrong.
Why don't you actually learn something about the technology and market penetration in those countries before YOU get on a soapbox. The reason why DoCoMo has 40M subscribers isn't because
I agree (Score:2)
Re:Unfortunately (Score:2)
Well, OK, it's not. The fact is, Europeans and Asians are apparently willing to spend more, on average, for cell phones than Americans. If cell phones ever become more important to the American consumer (or, rather, the additional features of these super-cell-phones do), Americans will be willing to pay more - and they will be released there.
In addition, the costs of cell pho
Seamless switching? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Seamless switching? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Seamless switching? (Score:1)
Great Idea (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Great Idea (Score:4, Funny)
Either that or the skull implanted cellphones Nokia is planning on that Linus talks about in his Just For Fun book.
Already been done - links inside (Score:2)
Re:Great Idea (Score:2)
What "great technology of Asia and Europe" are you talking about?
The same CDMA2000 1x EV-DO phones used in South Korea could be brought to the US. Verizon is deploying a CDMA2000 1x EV-DO network. 14 networks down, and they hope to have the entire network upgraded by the end of 2005.
Or did you mean the UMTS phones in Europe? ATT/Cingular is deploying UMTS.
Or did you mean the GSM phones used in Europe like the XDAIII?
telco monopoly (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:telco monopoly (Score:1)
Most cell phones have free calls to co-workers/spouses/family in some manner. The wireless telco.'s won't loose their bussiness by having lower usage on their networks, they will loose it if the industry is standardized enough to work around them. Once they are just selling connections and not 'services' the profit goes down, and they are the provider of services because of a lack of standards.
Re:telco monopoly (Score:2)
Re:telco monopoly (Score:2)
Some mobile operators don't have any infrastructure at all, e.g. Virgin in UK and US, and many others in rest of Europe - these are the ones who will buy WiFi+GSM phones. However, without seamless handover from WiFi to/from GSM, they'll find it difficult to really sell a lot of VoIP over Wi
Re:telco monopoly (Score:2)
will phones be cheaper then? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:will phones be cheaper then? (Score:1, Troll)
Re:will phones be cheaper then? (Score:3, Insightful)
First, even though they're using Linux, that doesn't necessarily mean that they're saving a significant amount. Anti-linux trolls have often said that Linux is only free if your time if valueless. While somewhat trite, this statement DOES have truth in it
Re:will phones be cheaper then? (Score:1)
is it stability? as crappy as my phone os's have been - they've never crashed on me. i've also never had a phone running WinCe- it's usually openwave or some such thing.
*snip*
>>it's a
The secret behind NT DoCoMo (Score:1, Funny)
All I want for Christmas (Score:3, Funny)
If my calling plan is reasonable, I don't care about VoIP.
Re:All I want for Christmas (Score:2)
What's a hacker to do? (Score:1, Interesting)
So where's the source? (Score:4, Interesting)
So where is it all? Or are they cheesing out and using only userland software to drive their phones?
(In which case, who cares if it's running Linux, because we can't do anything useful with it anyway?)
Re:So where's the source? (Score:2)
But to me as an end user the real question is whether or not the phone uses an open protocol to synchronize with a computer. I believe that Treo 600 synchronizes flawlessly with gnome-pilot. This is why I want a Treo.
PS: Here is a page about initial attempts to connect a Linux box to a Motorola a760 [kandalaya.org].
Re:So where's the source? (Score:1)
I propose... (Score:1)
More Mobile Linux Phones (Score:2)
eh ? (Score:1)
Why is the OS important ?
Surely it's just the usefulness features, or coolness of the phone which matters.
Using linux is just manufacurers saving licensing costs of Sybian, but how does this affect consumers; the savings won't be passed on.
Personally, while they are still refered to as phones, and tarrifs are kept confusing and basically the same, the ubiquitous mobility revolution cannot start.