Symbian has unveiled graphics and
networking enhancements to its smartphone operating system and predicted the
devices will become increasingly important as they gain features and
technologies usually associated with desktop computers.
Speaking at the Symbian
Smartphone Show in London, chief executive Nigel Clifford said the desktop,
mobile and internet worlds are all converging as people increasingly carry their
work and social life with them. "The smartphone will replace the desk phone and
the feature phone, and is the future of communications," he said. Symbian OS
currently powers 7 out of 10 smartphones worldwide.
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Symbian unveiled two new technologies: a new graphics architecture called
ScreenPlay designed to give a richer visual experience while preserving battery
life, and which scales with the capabilities of the handset; plus a new
networking architecture called FreeWay. Both will feature in handsets coming in
2008, Symbian said.
FreeWay is designed to work with forthcoming "Super 3G" mobile networks and
beyond, and will offer crystal clear VoIP calls, according to Clifford. It can
also switch intelligently and seamlessly between networks.
"If you are downloading from a hotspot and walk away, FreeWay detects the
signal is weakening and automatically switches to the mobile network, without
interrupting your download. When you get home, it detects your Wi-Fi there and
switches to using that," Clifford said.
Together with Symbian's earlier announcement of support for symmetric
multi-processing (SMP) in forthcoming mobile chips, the new features point to
future phones with much greater capabilities than today's handsets.
Sony Ericsson chief technology
officer Mats Lindoff said that smartphones would soon be able to replace a
laptop for many users. "What you have in a Sony Vaio now can be put in a
cellphone by 2010," he claimed. However, he warned that battery capacity is not
keeping pace with new features.
Also at the show, Nokia
unveiled a new touch-based user interface for its S60 software, which runs atop
Symbian OS. This allows S60-based devices to support keyboard, finger or stylus
input, with tactile feedback when users touch the screen, the company said. It
is expected to appear in devices from 2008.
Quickoffice and DataViz both demonstrated updated versions of their mobile
productivity suites with support for Microsoft Office 2007 file formats.
Quickoffice Premier V5 supports S60 phones, while Documents To Go targets phones
running the UIQ user interface, such as Sony Ericsson's P990. Both suites are
set to ship in December.
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