Life gets tougher for alternative mobile OSes Tizen, Firefox and Ubuntu
An increased focus on affordable smartphones running Android
has left smaller operating systems behind
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SamSung Tizen-baSed z1 |
developer Canonical are trying to step up hardware efforts. Mozilla is working to ensure future Firefox OS smartphones meet or exceed expectations in terms of performance and reliability, at all price points, CEO Chris Beard said in a recent email to the community. As part of this reboot, Mozilla CTO Andreas Gal, who co-created Firefox OS and wrote the first lines of code, is leaving Mozilla this week. The push to build £25 smartphones hasn’t been as successful as the organization had hoped. The lesson is that Firefox OS phones have to offer something more than just a low price. Meanwhile, Canonical is working with Spanish hardware maker BQ on a highend Ubuntu-based smartphone designed to double as a PC when connected to an external screen and keyboard, according to Cristian Parrino, vice president of Mobile and Online Services at Canonical. It will also be the first Ubuntu device that’s not based on a previously released Android smartphone. “For once we’d like to come out with a device at the same time as it comes out on Android,” Parrino said. For example, BQ launched recently its second device running Canonical’s OS, the €200 (£143) Aquaris E5 HD Ubuntu Edition, whose Android edition started shipping last year. The smartphone has a 5in HD screen, a 13Mp rear camera and a 5Mp front
camera. While the launch is a step in the right direction, the smartphone lacks LTE and features a low-end quad-core 1.3GHz Cortex-A7 processor from MediaTek. One development that would help all the OSes is wider support from smartphone manufacturers, but up and coming vendors such as Xiaomi and India’s Micromax Informatics have showed little interest in the newcomers, preferring Android instead. Xiaomi has its own MIUI user interface and Micromax is collaborating with Cyanogen. The alternative operating systems don’t have enough scale. When even Microsoft is struggling to compete, it’s hard to see how the smaller platforms can make a difference, Micromax chairman Sanjay Kapoor said in an interview earlier this year. To help with growth, Samsung has installed Tizen on smartwatches and TVs. The latter is a product category Mozilla is going after, as well. Panasonic has started rolling out its first Firefox OS Viera TVs. Success won’t come easier in these two sectors, but it could help raise the profile of the two operating systems. Still, with a combined market share of less than 0.4 percent, all three operating systems face an uphill battle, and if they disappear, it would be a loss for consumers, because it would mean less competitive pressure for Apple and Google.
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