Stories
Slash Boxes
Comments

News for nerds, stuff that matters

Slashdot Log In

Log In

Create Account  |  Retrieve Password

Motorola Moving to Android, Windows Mobile for Smartphones

Posted by Soulskill on Fri Oct 31, 2008 09:14 PM
from the changing-horses dept.
nerdyH writes "Motorola will ditch its MotoMAGX Linux stack and UIQ Symbian stack in favor of Google's Android Linux/Java stack and Windows Mobile 6.5 and 7, it announced today. The news comes after five years selling millions of Linux phones in Asia, and after a year during which many of Motorola's top US phones used the homegrown Linux stack. Motorola's current Linux phones in the US include the RAZR2 v8, E8, EM30, U9, ZN4, and ZN5." This also comes alongside news that Motorola's financial hardships are causing them to cut 3,000 jobs. It also puts into perspective their recent plans to hire hundreds of Android developers.
+ -
story

Related Stories

[+] Developers: Motorola To Hire 300 Android Developers 88 comments
ruphus13 writes "Google's Android is starting to see more industry support. Motorola recently announced plans, despite hardships within the company, to hire 300 Android developers. Quoting: 'A quick search of Motorola's job openings suggests that, indeed, Android is set to become a permanent fixture at Motorola, which has long built Linux-based phones but hitherto used MontaVista's Mobilinux. The goal? Move from an internal development pool of 50 Android-savvy developers to 350. Motorola, recognizing that most developers won't have deep experience with Google Android, is looking for a somewhat general skillset ... Java and Google Android programming experience is listed as 'highly desirable,' but not required.'" T-Mobile has already made plans to use Android as well. Xconomy has a related interview with a member of the MIT team that won a $275,000 prize in the Android Developer Challenge by creating an application to automatically modify a phone's settings depending on its location, which they say "wouldn't even be possible on an iPhone." We've previously discussed the Challenge itself and some of the other winning apps.
[+] RIM Accuses Motorola of Blocking Job Offers 353 comments
theodp writes "Taking a page from the insanely-jealous-husband-playbook, Motorola management has adopted an if-I-can't-have-you-nobody-can stance on its fired employees, reportedly blocking RIM from offering jobs to laid-off workers. In a complaint filed in state court, Motorola is charged with improperly trying to expand a previous agreement 'to prevent the RIM entities from hiring any Motorola employees, including the thousands of employees Motorola has already fired or will fire.' Through its Compete America membership, Motorola has repeatedly warned Congress that failing to accommodate the lobbying group members' 'principled' demand for timely access to talent would not be in the United States' economic interest and would make the US second-rate in education and basic research."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.
The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. We are not responsible for them in any way.
 Full
 Abbreviated
 Hidden
More
Loading... please wait.
  • by plover (150551) * on Friday October 31 2008, @09:21PM (#25591723) Homepage Journal

    Maybe this means they'll finally deliver a non-buggy app suite. I think Motorola has been suffering because of the quality of their software. I have had very few problems with the hardware I've owned that weren't software based. (I don't blame Motorola for the broken hinge on my son's RAZR.) I like that they have adopted many standards, such as mini-USB connectors on every device that are used for both data and charging, they've been a big supporter of the Bluetooth SIG, and their attempt to go with Linux (even though they kind of went off on their own with MotoMAGX.) I even bought a Z6 from them earlier this year for geeky reasons: the Linux OS and the fact that they sell them unlocked directly to consumers.

    I hope that they do survive their current turmoil, and an Android stack is pretty exciting (even though it's a year late) because that promises a large suite of apps.

    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      Unfortunately, Motorola phones seem to suck in quite a platform-independent, or shall we say, portable way.
    • by lysergic.acid (845423) on Friday October 31 2008, @10:23PM (#25592083) Homepage

      mini-USB connectors are definitely a huge plus. the last time i went to Best Buy was while accompanying a friend to get a data link cable for his phone (i forget which model it was), and after looking at 10-12 different link cables, we still couldn't find one that fit the proprietary data port on his phone. the closest thing we saw was an "All-in-One Cell Phone Data Transfer Suite" which came with 10 different cables for various brands of phones, but it cost something like $90.

      there's absolutely no reason to use a proprietary connector for what is basically just a USB port. it would be so much easier, and more convenient, for consumers if all handset makers just used mini-USB connectors like everyone else. you don't see digital cameras or external hard drives coming with their own proprietary USB/FireWire ports. it's such a blatant attempt by handset makers to rip off their customers with overpriced data cables--which they usually have to buy separately in addition to requiring a different one for each handset.

      i mean, if you wouldn't put up with this kind of scumbag business move with your external hard drive, digital cameras, or MP3 players, then why would you put up with it with your cell phone? heck, my PSP uses Sony's overpriced Memory Stick Pro Duo format instead of the more universal Micro SD format, but it still uses a standard mini-USB connector like pretty much all other portable devices.

      • The chinese government has decided that, in the future, all phones will be required to use the humble USB port for charging [techdirt.com].

        I have a Motorola phone with the USB port, and was quite distraught to find that it wouldn't charge when I plugged it into my computer. WTF? There's a russian site online that shows how to short a USB cable so it can charge. I eventually found that if I installed Motorola's drivers it'd charge just fine.

        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          I believe the USB port in Windows will only supply power when the device is identified, to save power.

          Of course, if the phone has no power, this is a monstrous inconvenience. I've taken to carrying a wind-up LED torch with a charger socket ; that way, I can prolong talk time when the battery is low and I have no outlet, and when it's flat, I can give it enough juice for the computer to charge it.

          I'm not sure whether Ubuntu will charge it with a flat battery either, I must try that. But it certainly seems to

      • by wall0159 (881759) on Saturday November 01 2008, @01:04AM (#25592805)

        "you wouldn't put up with this kind of scumbag business move with ... MP3 players"

        you mean like the ipod?

        (I say this as the owner of an ipod nano)

        • good point, but remember that even though their connector is proprietary, they give you a cable for it when you buy the unit - it doesn't require you to go buy another one. But you're right when it comes to buying 3rd party peripherals. The car charger for your phone won't work for your ipod (which would be nice)
          • Actually, almost all the cars in the world these days have factory options for iPod/iPhone rechargers. Almost none have options for USB chargers.

            Considering the ubiquity of iPod connectors in planes, computers, clock radios, cars, etc., I wish the Chinese had chosen it instead of mini USB. If you have a mini USB phone, about the only thing you can use to charge it is a computer, and that's not very convenient.

            • Great, so you have to buy a new car to get the charger... or an accessory to plug into the 12V cigar lighter socket.

              You can also get 12V lighter socket chargers for USB, and wall outlet chargers with USB sockets on too these days.

              I wish Apple had chosen a standard instead of their proprietary connector, but it obviously has more functions than just power and data. An mini-usb with a small extension for the extra lones that was physically compatible with a standard connector (for just data and power) might h

        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          Recall that the dock connector was not developed as a USB connector. It was developed as a firewire connector, which could also use USB. While this capability is not useful for most people, and therefore not worth the extra hassle, it at least somewhat justifies the existence of the $30 cable.

          I recall when I bought my mini, and how nice it was to have firewire and not to have to wait forever for the music to load over the slow USB port. I also recall leaving the cable plugged into the back of my hard di

    • I think the quality of hardware is fine (as in I feel like the RAZR was a pretty solid phone that would not break easily).

      Where I diverge is that I don't think Motorola is good at making usable hardware. After a year or two, I hated the buttons on the RAZR. I didn't like the keypad, and I thought they way they used the side buttons was demonic and caused me to miss many a call hitting them as I reached into my pocket, or randomly changing things I did not want changed.

      However I absolutely agree with your

  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday October 31 2008, @09:27PM (#25591755)
    In other words, they're switching from Linux (custom stack) to Linux (standardized stack). Normally such a move is lauded; Motorola needs to do less to upkeep their stack, offloading the work onto Google and the community. It helps standardize their software more, meaning that software can move from Motorola Phone #1 to Samsung Phone #8, which even with Java it's damned hard to do today.

    It's news, but it's not earthshattering news.
    • Not earth shattering, but certainly a step in the right direction.
    • by Chandon Seldon (43083) on Saturday November 01 2008, @01:15AM (#25592843) Homepage

      In other words, they're switching from Linux (custom stack) to Linux (standardized stack).

      Or the opposite, if you remember that Android supports neither native Linux applications nor J2ME applications.

        • -- The act of censorship is always worse than whatever is being censored. Always.

          Six million Jews would doubt you, but don't worry, they've been censored REAL well.

          OMFG, stupidest post ever, I'm drunk... be merciful...

  • So does this mean users of the A1200 will be able to run android? One can only hope, I know OpenEZX has put a lot of effort into being able to install your own Linux variant on the phone but I would not be able to do that, there's no guide on their site for one, plus I bricking my phone isn't an option.

  • by SuperKendall (25149) on Friday October 31 2008, @09:49PM (#25591891)

    Motorola going to Android, ditching old crufty phone OS'es - a fantastic idea.

    But they follow the ill-fated palm of Palm in dividing resources, by going both with Android and Windows Mobile! When Palm pulled that move they lost focus, and products suffered as a result. I can't help but forsee the same fate engulfing Motorola as they go further down the path of becoming a has-been...

    I don't know what company will take Android to the heights it could achieve, but now I don't think it will be Motorola.

    • by LingNoi (1066278) on Friday October 31 2008, @09:56PM (#25591941)

      They're probably balancing on the fence keeping their options open. I doubt they'd keep two code bases maintained.

    • by lysergic.acid (845423) on Friday October 31 2008, @10:36PM (#25592177) Homepage

      i wonder if HTC has adopted a similar strategy. they used to use Windows Mobile exclusively for all of their handsets, but now that they're in the Open Handset Alliance and have produced the Dream/G1, does that mean they're going to be an all-android handset manufacturer, or are they still going to keep making Windows Mobile handsets?

      i guess since Android is still a nascent and largely an untested platform, most OHA members probably aren't going to put all of their eggs in one basket just yet. but perhaps in a year or two, once Android has proven itself commercially, companies like Motorola will be more willing to commit themselves to the platform and drop Windows Mobile.

      • by TubeSteak (669689) on Friday October 31 2008, @11:46PM (#25592491) Journal

        IMO, none of this matters if the Cell Carrier is allowed to fark up the handset manufacturer's hard work with a custom firmware that strips out features.

      • I'm pretty sure HTC has stated that they're going to keep producing WinMo phones for the foreseeable future. Since they're the biggest/best manufacturer of WinMo phones, I don't see why not. And while Android is cool, at this point it's still a 1.0 product without as much software available as WinMo. I doubt HTC would ever drop WinMo since it seems to be heading towards improvement with the increased competition.
    • Exactly (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Britz (170620) on Saturday November 01 2008, @05:18AM (#25593629)

      No focus was one of the reasons they went down in the first place. Can someone tell me how many operating systems they had in use for their phones?

      Off the top of my head:

      1. Some JavaME thing (don't know the name)
      2. MotoMAGX
      3. Symbian
      4. Don't they already have Windows Mobile?
      5. P2K (for the low end)

      Are there more?

      Anyways, they now want to "focus" on "just" three. P2K, Windows, Android. IMHO they should either go for Android or for Windows. If they really want Android (Windows Mobile is a little 90s) they could just buy Windows phones from China and rebrand them for their business customers that need Windows Mobile.

  • WinMo upgrades (Score:5, Insightful)

    by mrsteveman1 (1010381) on Friday October 31 2008, @09:59PM (#25591957) Homepage

    Last WinMo device i had, the manufacturer simply didn't feel like updating the software for my specific device when a new version came out, even though it could in fact support the newer version. A hardware manufacturer shouldn't have that level of control over the software.

    That was the last WinMo device i bought and it's going to stay that way. Of course most of these upgrades to WinMo amount to "Now with 15% less suck!" so I'm sure i wasn't missing much, but it annoyed me into never buying one again.

    • On the other side with anything else aren't you stuck with the same amount of suck the whole time?

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      I have had a WinMo device which people cleverly made a custom ROM for WM6 (it was a WM5 device). This allowed encryption of the MiniSD memory card, as well as the ability to have the phone erase itself on command from an Exchange server.

      Its worked well for me for daily use, but I don't see many new apps coming out for WM, nor much interest in new stuff, other than minor software updates.

      It seems like everyone and their dog has seemed to have dumped Symbian, Blackberry, and WM for iPhone SDKs and placement

  • Wanted (Score:5, Funny)

    by Gastrobot (998966) on Friday October 31 2008, @10:00PM (#25591959)
    Android Developer Must have BS in computer science or related field or equivalent experience. Minimum 5 years developing applications to run on Google's Android. Java certification a plus!
    • You know when Java first came out, I saw some job ads asking for five years' Java experience. I don't think Bill Joy applied though.

  • by Hurricane78 (562437) <navid,zamani&googlemail,com> on Friday October 31 2008, @10:05PM (#25591999)

    First the outsource to india, and now robots??

    The take our jooobs! [youtube.com]

    Dey dak err jaaabs!! [youtube.com]

    Dek uuur dewwww!!! [youtube.com]

  • by MikeRT (947531) on Friday October 31 2008, @10:05PM (#25592001) Homepage

    Is bring a good competitor to the G1 to Verizon. I don't know what most states are like, but almost everyone I know who doesn't own an iPhone uses Verizon in Virginia. If they could get a quality Android-based product available for $200-$300 on the Verizon network, they'd see a huge surge in sales in this state.

    • by Ritz_Just_Ritz (883997) on Friday October 31 2008, @10:27PM (#25592121)

      Verizon doesn't want something open. They want to own your ass from the cradle to the grave. Android does not fit in their business model. If you want more functionality, they want you to PAY for it (and pay...and pay again).

      • Yeah, one of many reasons why I just left Verizon for T-Mobile. They lock down any feature of a phone they cannot figure out a way to charge for or feel that would rival one of their sold services, and they cannot even get a reasonable selection of quality phones. And don't you dare call phones such as the Voyager quality phones or I'll smack you in the face. Was getting near the end of my contract with Verizon and needed to replace my old phone (started crapping out from being dropped too many times) an
        • Seriously, Verizon is such BS with their phones. They have less phones with Wifi than most people have fingers on one hand, last I checked, and they're way more expensive than the equivalent GSM models. All their Blackberries don't have Wifi I think, yet the nearest equivalent AT&T model usually does. If they didn't have a good network I wouldn't use them at all.
  • by gelfling (6534) on Friday October 31 2008, @10:12PM (#25592039) Homepage Journal

    Sprint will continue to do what it does slow, weird, late and expensive.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      Sprint needs to turn themselves around. First, they need to get G4 service or WiMax out there nationwide, as perhaps an alternative for home Internet service other than DSL or cable. Second, they need to make people want to buy their stuff. There are a couple cool Sprint phones, but most people tend to either buy a free (with plan) handset, or an iPhone. The low end handset does what most people want... take/receive calls, some text messaging, basic addressbook. The iPhone has pretty much locked up the

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        When you call the iPhone a smartphone, god kills a kitten. Apple determines what software is allowable on the iPhone, and most of the apps on it are for entertainment purposes or is garbage. The main use for the thing, as admitted by Apple, is to basically have an iPod phone that delivers your need for both a cell phone and a music/video device. The iPhone isn't even in the same sentence as phones such as some of those made by RIM, HTC, etc in the smartphone argument. It's a music/video/toy phone. As f
        • Apple determines what software is allowable on the iPhone, and most of the apps on it are for entertainment purposes or is garbage.

          So what are the statistics for other platforms? My-Symbian.com's list of Series 60 apps [my-symbian.com] has the most apps in the, err, umm, "Games and Entertainment" category, followed by "Miscellaneous Utilties", followed by "Graphics & Multimedia".

          Browsing Microsoft's Windows Mobile Catalog [microsoft.com] shows, by far, the most apps in, well, "Games and Entertainment", followed by "Business and Office Productivity".

          The main use for the thing, as admitted by Apple, is to basically have an iPod phone that delivers your need for both a cell phone and a music/video device.

          Citation for that admission, please?

  • Motorola's software is on par with Sony's (absolutely horrendous). They really need to just focus on making solid hardware with appealing industrial design.

    I tried writing software for the A780, a very interesting hardware platform with a built-in GPS. But, they never allowed access to the GPS and the other interesting bits. Really short-sighted... why would anyone want to write software for a platform sandboxed to hell?

  • by Alex Belits (437) * on Saturday November 01 2008, @03:36AM (#25593305) Homepage

    Java, Java, Java, Java,
    Java, Java, Java, Java,

    mushroom(*), mushroom!

    Java, Java, Java, Java,
    Java, Java, Java, Java,
    Java, Java, Java, Java,

    mushroom, mushroom!

    Java, Java, Java, Java,
    Java, Java, Java, Java,
    Java, Java, Java, Java,

    Oh, snake(**), oh, snake! Oh, it's a snake!

    --
    (*) Obviously a hallucinogenic kind that they have at Google if they think, Java is appropriate for mobile devices

    (**) Python that ironically is also developed by a person who works for Google -- and would be more appropriate for the purpose.

  • If that house of pain Motorola gets involved in Android sales, it'll start bleeding it's disasterous management into the Goog's advertising revenue utopia & take the Goog down with it. Anything but a Motorola/Goog partnership. Why not Nokia or GM, or Chrystler?

    • That looks like a newer version of the L6 [motorola.com].

      My L6 has been durable, fantastic, and simple with no problems except for one: the buttons are way too damn small.

      It's great for the ladies or for very small hands in general but I have to use my finer motor skills else I get the keypad-mashing effect.
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        As a European who uses text more than calling this is an endemic problem with cell phones - they are universally crap for texting because of small buttons. Maybe now that the super hype of money for nothing style over substance shallow consumerism has landed each and every one of us with a tax bill of a couple of hundred thousand dollars of future taxation to pay off fucking barking mad asset inflation - we can get back to consumer goods that do what we need them to do rather than some marketing droids drea

    • What blows me away is not that someone has a hardon for/against Obama, but that someone took the time to write this weird-ass shit, and then post it. I've got lots of political vitriol inside me, but nothing that would merit the time it took to write this amazing piece. Well done, AC. You have freaked me out/blown my mind more than anyone else on /.

      • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

        by Anonymous Coward

        FYI: This same story gets posted all the time, sometimes (I believe) with different people as the target/subject. So, really, just a copy/paste with some editing, not much time involved.

      • Mainly because Samsung phones look cheap and have poor software for the most part. Not 100% true but true of many of their phones. HTC, RIM, and Nokia are the companies I would say make generally rock solid phones, for the most part. Of course, you could say that of the three, only Nokia makes actual phones, and RIM and HTC make PDAs that you can make phone calls from.
    • This comes from your apparent vast experience with the G1, right? /endsarcasm.

      I got a G1, and the thing is an absolute dream. About my only complaint if that there isn't a great selection of good carrying cases so far and I find myself relying on the sleeve that came with it. The slider is solid feeling, the phone as a whole has a very durable feeling to it and the bottom is not "glued on." I actually find that the angle of the bottom makes it easier to use the hardware keys and only slightly interferes

        • I really like the slider but am looking forward to the upcoming apps that are being developed for change in screen rotation without having to use the slider and also the upcoming additions to Android early next year that will allow for a softkeyboard. But having made some posts on here and other sites directly from my G1 really makes it worthwhile. Did I mention I pay 15 bucks less per month for unlimited data than anyone who owns an iPhone will?
    • As long as much of the world uses Windows, most of the mobile world will use Windows Mobile on smartphones. Such is the way of the world. Personally I'm rooting hard for Google with Android because I think it'll end up being a much more robust OS than the Windows Mobile platform, and being open automatically makes it better than anything Apple puts out.
      • I'm actually pretty sure WinMo isn't the most common smartphone platform - that distinction probably goes to RIM, and if not then S60. But Nokia has a much smaller presence in the US than in Europe and Asia. I'm pretty sure RIM has the most smartphones overall.
        • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

          I'm actually pretty sure WinMo isn't the most common smartphone platform - that distinction probably goes to RIM, and if not then S60. But Nokia has a much smaller presence in the US than in Europe and Asia. I'm pretty sure RIM has the most smartphones overall.

          Gartner's Q2 2008 worldwide statistics [gartner.com] by OS put Symbian first, followed by RIM, followed by Windows Mobile, followed by Linux, followed by Mac OS X^W^W^WiPhone OS.

          Synergy Research's first-half 2008 US smartphone figures [srgresearch.com] put RIM at the top (46%), Apple second (15%), Motorola third (presumably for all OSes).