Nokia announced that it will purchase the remaining
stock it doesn't own in Symbian and then migrate the solution to an "Open"
platform. ABI Researchers have some interesting comments on the move.
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- ABI Research vice president Stuart Carlaw says, "There has been financial
pressure on Nokia to move in this direction at some point. The sheer economics
of the number of devices it ships with the OS versus the value it gets out of
its historic shareholding clearly indicated that such a `rescue' was inevitable
at some point." - Also according to Carlaw, "The real spice in this announcement is that Nokia
is stating that it will offer the OS in a more 'open' way. Perhaps this is an
admission that the pressure from the Linux industry is really forcing Nokia and
Symbian to change their game. Questions remain as to whether the solution will
be truly open and what the cost of a Symbian Foundation membership will
be." - Research director Kevin Burden adds, "There are also questions on where the
up and coming mobile Linux platforms would be today had Nokia taken care of this
purchase several years ago. It's very possible that Nokia will eventually
position the Symbian platform for mid-tier devices with another platform
powering its high-end devices - a position that Sony Ericsson has already
taken."