Verizon Wireless has announced that it will concentrate future operating
system design on the LiMo Foundation rather than Google's Android platform.
The US telco has been given a seat on the board of the LiMo Foundation, and
will become a core member of the consortium which includes Motorola, NEC, NTT
DoCoMo, Panasonic Mobile Communications, Samsung and Vodafone.
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The LiMo Foundation will develop a Linux-based mobile phone platform that is
pledged to be totally open.
"Verizon Wireless is demonstrating itself as a champion of openness in mobile
innovation by joining the board of the LiMo Foundation," said Morgan Gillis,
executive director of the Foundation.
"Major wireless service providers from across North America, Asia and Europe
are now engaged in committed collaboration through LiMo.
"This offers further concrete evidence that LiMo is positioned at the heart
of the rapidly emerging, industry-wide trend to secure the benefits of openness
and choice in technology."
Verizon Wireless is demonstrating itself as a champion of openness
Morgan Gillis LiMo Foundation
The news will come as a blow to Google, whose
Android
platform has failed to get many supporters despite initial interest.
Analysts claim that Android now faces being squeezed out of a mobile market
dominated by Symbian and Microsoft. Linux, however, is
gaining
supporters fast.
"The addition of Verizon Wireless to the LiMo roster is another critical
milestone in our foundation's rapid growth and market impact," said Kiyohito
Nagata, a vice president at NTT DoCoMo, and chairman of the LiMo Foundation.
"In technical output, governance constructs and business models, LiMo lives
out its belief that openness is the key to unlocking innovation to the benefit
of the whole industry and mobile consumers everywhere."
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