LiMo Says Vodafone's Android Support Shouldn't Fragment the Mobile Linux Space Vodafone's membership in the Google-led Open Handset Alliance isn't necessarily a bad thing for the LiMo Foundation, which makes an open-source mobile operating system based on Linux that some see as vying for smartphone supremacy with Google's Android mobile and wireless stack. LiMo's Morgan Gillis says overlap
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JustAnotherMobilePhoneBlog on 13th Dec 2008 (via feeds.feedburner.com)
Why is Software Flexibility so Vital to the Development of Forthcoming Handset Devices? Asokan Thiyagarajan, Technology Evangelist, Motorola Related posts:Video: Handset Forum USA - Morgan Gillis, LiMo Foundation Morgan Gillis, Executive Director,... Visit Mobileslate at for commentary on Mobile Data and the Mobile Lifestyle
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Mobileslate on 1st Nov 2008 (via feeds.feedburner.com)
Morgan Gillis, Executive Director, LiMo Foundation Related posts:Handango Future Forum This afternoon, I went over the the San Francisco...Mobile Video in 2006 Well, well, well. Mobile video is certainly touted even more...Cricket Offers $5 Mobile... Visit Mobileslate at for commentary on Mobile Data and the Mobile Lifestyle
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Mobileslate on 31st Oct 2008 (via feeds.feedburner.com)
With the offensive of the likes of the Symbian Foundation, the Limo Foundation and Google Android all working on grabbing what they can of the market share, one would have thought that most closed source mobile phone platforms would be looking to switch and open up. However, during a recent developer’s conference a developer posed the
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PhonesReview on 30th Oct 2008 (via phonesreview.co.uk)
Access, the PalmSource buyer, has just publicized its Palm OS successor — the Access Linux Platform 3.0. As implied by its name, Access Linux Platform 3.0 is Linux-based yet it supports not only Linux applications. It is also supportive of Garnet OS applications, even Java. ALP 3.0 has strictly complied with the LiMo Foundation’s specifications
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FeelPhones on 25th Oct 2008 (via feelphones.com)
Analysts and other mobile and wireless experts mull the impact the Android-based G1 from T-Mobile and Google will have on the industry, as well as on the search engine. Some argue that Google must offer its Web services to a broad swath of devices and refrain from locking in users who don't trust the Google brand. Indeed, LiMo Foundation's Morgan Gillis is concerned about lock-in to the ...
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eWEEKWireless on 24th Sep 2008 (via feedproxy.google.com)
“You don’t have to be a Google booster to realize the Tuesday launch of the Internet king’s Android platform may alter the mobile landscape. High on the list of those likely to be affected are the LiMo Foundation, a competing alliance of mobile companies with its own open-source mobile operating system, and Mozilla, maker of
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MobilityPhones on 24th Sep 2008 (via mobilityphones.com)
LiMo Foundation welcomes the launch of the G1 device using Google's Android platform As an organisation that was brought into being by the mobile industry to unlock innovation and catalyze choice throughout the value system -- and especially for the mobile consumer -- LiMo Foundation welcomes the launch of the G1 device using Google's Android platform. We believe that the G1, following after the 2...
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JustAnotherMobilePhoneBlog on 24th Sep 2008 (via feeds.feedburner.com)
Latest Panasonic FOMA P706ie is 23rd Device in Market Leveraging LiMo Platform™ Technology LONDON, England, TOKYO, Japan, —LiMo Foundation™, the global consortium of mobile leaders delivering an open handset platform for the whole mobile industry, detailed today the 23rd LiMo-compliant handset. The FOMA P706ie from Panasonic Mobile Communications is another commercially shipping model that d...
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JustAnotherMobilePhoneBlog on 24th Sep 2008 (via feeds.feedburner.com)