14 February 2011

  1. Front Page
  2. Development
  3. Community
  4. Devices
  5. Maemo in the Wild
  6. Announcements
  7. Download issue

Other Issues

  1. 14 May 2012
  2. 7 May 2012
  3. 30 April 2012
  4. 23 April 2012
  5. 16 April 2012
  6. 9 April 2012
  7. 2 April 2012
  8. 26 March 2012
  9. 19 March 2012
  10. 12 March 2012
  11. 5 March 2012
  12. 27 February 2012
  13. 20 February 2012
  14. 13 February 2012
  15. 6 February 2012
  16. 30 January 2012
  17. 23 January 2012
  18. 16 January 2012
  19. 9 January 2012
  20. 2 January 2012
  21. 19 December 2011
  22. 12 December 2011
  23. 5 December 2011
  24. 28 November 2011
  25. 21 November 2011
  26. 14 November 2011
  27. 7 November 2011
  28. 31 October 2011
  29. 24 October 2011
  30. 17 October 2011
  31. 10 October 2011
  32. 3 October 2011
  33. 26 September 2011
  34. 19 September 2011
  35. 12 September 2011
  36. 5 September 2011
  37. 29 August 2011
  38. 22 August 2011
  39. 15 August 2011
  40. 8 August 2011
  41. 1 August 2011
  42. 25 July 2011
  43. 18 July 2011
  44. 11 July 2011
  45. 4 July 2011
  46. 27 June 2011
  47. 20 June 2011
  48. 13 June 2011
  49. 6 June 2011
  50. 30 May 2011
  51. 23 May 2011
  52. 16 May 2011
  53. 9 May 2011
  54. 2 May 2011
  55. 25 April 2011
  56. 18 April 2011
  57. 11 April 2011
  58. 4 April 2011
  59. 28 March 2011
  60. 21 March 2011
  61. 14 March 2011
  62. 7 March 2011
  63. 28 February 2011
  64. 21 February 2011
  65. 7 February 2011
  66. 31 January 2011
  67. 24 January 2011
  68. 17 January 2011
  69. 10 January 2011
  70. 3 January 2011
  71. 20 December 2010
  72. 13 December 2010
  73. 6 December 2010
  74. 29 November 2010
  75. 22 November 2010
  76. 15 November 2010
  77. 8 November 2010
  78. 1 November 2010
  79. 25 October 2010
  80. 18 October 2010
  81. 11 October 2010
  82. 4 October 2010
  83. 27 September 2010
  84. 20 September 2010
  85. 13 September 2010
  86. 6 September 2010
  87. 30 August 2010
  88. 23 August 2010
  89. 16 August 2010
  90. 9 August 2010
  91. 2 August 2010
  92. 26 July 2010
  93. 19 July 2010
  94. 12 July 2010
  95. 5 July 2010
  96. 28 June 2010
  97. 21 June 2010
  98. 14 June 2010
  99. 7 June 2010
  100. 31 May 2010
  101. 24 May 2010
  102. 17 May 2010
  103. 10 May 2010
  104. 3 May 2010
  105. 26 April 2010
  106. 19 April 2010
  107. 12 April 2010
  108. 5 April 2010
  109. 29 March 2010
  110. 22 March 2010
  111. 15 March 2010
  112. 8 March 2010
  113. 1 March 2010
  114. 22 February 2010
  115. 15 February 2010
  116. 8 February 2010
  117. 1 February 2010

In the Wild

Myriad Alien Dalvik allows Android apps on Maemo

Myriad, a French/Swiss software company specializing in mobile phones, has announced Alien Dalvik, which will provide a Dalvik VM for non-Android platforms. Building on the launch of Dalvik Turbo, Alien Dalvik signifies Myriad’s latest Android innovation by enabling Android apps to operate on a much wider range of platforms and devices. As a result, operators, OEMs and application store owners can now easily access the Android ecosystem and deploy Android applications across multiple device operating systems, all without compromising performance. Alien Dalvik enables the majority of Android applications to run unmodified, allowing application store owners to quickly kick start Android application store services by simply repackaging Android Package (APK) files. If reasonably capable, availability of a large portion of Android's application catalog could be a large selling point for other platforms. A demo on the N900 will be shown at MWC and it will, apparently, be commercially available for MeeGo later this year.

CEO of Nokia lays out the problems in internal memo

Ahead of Friday's announcement came the publication of a leaked copy of a memo sent from Stephen Elop. More of a historical footnote now, it notes the problems Nokia have in delivery and in the market: The first iPhone shipped in 2007, and we still don't have a product that is close to their experience. Android came on the scene just over 2 years ago, and this week they took our leadership position in smartphone volumes. Unbelievable.

We have some brilliant sources of innovation inside Nokia, but we are not bringing it to market fast enough. We thought MeeGo would be a platform for winning high-end smartphones. However, at this rate, by the end of 2011, we might have only one MeeGo product in the market. The memo mentions nothing about Microsoft - nor would it, they barely register as a competitor - and was, unfortunately mistakenly, seen as a sign that Elop might plough resources into MeeGo to get it out and successful.

Developers already start abandoning Qt

One developer does not a trend make, and we're not interested in whether or not *Nokia* retain developers - instead, Qt is integral to MeeGo and without a vendor in the market, those who have invested time and money in aligning with Nokia's Qt vision have been burnt for the last time: I announced a Qt/N900 version last spring. Unfortunately Nokia has been unable to execute its Qt strategy (that I thought was great) and today they announced that they will drop it. Nokia will go with Windows Phone 7 and Microsoft developer tools. This means that to support new Nokia phones I would have to write RaceChrono again using proprietary languages like Silverlight and C#, which seems totally unreasonable. Also as Qt is dropped, you can forget me ever announcing Qt/N900 version. It will not happen, sorry!