Palm OS Apps on Linux Mobile Phones 50
An anonymous reader writes "PalmSource revealed details of its Linux-based mobile phone operating system, Tuesday at 3GSM in Barcelona. Codenamed ALP (Access Linux Platform), the architecture supports Palm OS application binaries, Java apps, and native Linux apps. ALP includes a 68K emulation layer capable of running 'properly written' Palm 68K or 'Garnet' application binaries without modification, PalmSource claims. However, devices based on ALP are not expected until next year -- will it be too late for PalmSource and it's parent company ACCESS to gain a foothold in the mobile phone market?"
PalmSource Open Sources Binder (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Linux, Apple, Palm Emulator (Score:3, Informative)
why not years ago? (Score:4, Insightful)
One might ask why they didn't do that. Well, for the answer look to the article on Shuttleworth: Palm's engineers had so much more fun designing a new operating system from scratch that the obvious answer eluded them, and because Palm was flying high, they had the money and resources to waste on their hare-brained project of developing their own new operating system.
Unfortunately, Palm's idiocy probably condemns us all to using PocketPC or Qt/Embedded at some point.
Re:why not years ago? (Score:5, Informative)
Don't forget, the first Palms were released in 1996. Back then, desktop CPUs were past the 100MHz mark and pushing past one instruction per clock. The DragonBall, in comparison, had less power than a MicroVAX and, while you can run NetBSD on a MicroVAX, you really don't want to - and you'd want to even less if you had to re-write the VM subsystem to work without an MMU.
The original PalmOS was designed for a platform where features were far less important than battery life. Shoehorning a full UNIX-like OS in would have required a lot more resources, which would have driven the cost up and the battery life down - exactly the opposite of what was required.
Re:why not years ago? (Score:3, Informative)
Actually, PalmOS was designed to handl
Re:why not years ago? (Score:3, Informative)
They did. Palm OS used the AMX kernel from Kadak.
-Isaac
Re:why not years ago? (Score:3, Insightful)
That's why I said "3-5 years ago", not "10 years ago". The original PalmOS was a reasonable business decision
But as soon as they switched to ARM, they should have moved to Linux or BSD. They could have done so with less effort than it took them to produce PalmOS 5, and they could have preserved full backwards compatibility. They missed the boat again (and wasted even more money) when they developed Cobalt. PalmOS 5 and Cobalt were both big business blu
YaY (Yet another Yawn)? (Score:3, Insightful)
At least SonyEricsson has released free toolchains... For Symbian.
Where oh where is the phone vendor that will release a smartphone with the ability to load custom-written Linux apps ala
But of course, normal people don't buy smartphones, cell companies do. So it won't happen. Oh well.
Re:YaY (Yet another Yawn)? (Score:1, Insightful)
It is not possible to get FCC type approval for mobile phones if the software can be modified by the user. So as long as Linux is not safely separated from the communication software, just as an application running in
Wow, tough crowd (Score:3, Interesting)
With all due respect, with that attitude it sounds like the lack of progress for Linux in this market space has as much to do with the hobbyist community as it does with the manufacturers of these devices. If every open-source-related announcement by an ISV or gadget-maker is met with a response like this from hobbyists there won't be much enthusiasm to keep going down the Free Software path.
Pretty much every company out there in the wireles
will it be too late for PalmSource? (Score:2)
I sure hope not. Windows Mobile seems to be well on it's way toward taking over a significant portion of this market which needs competition. It will certainly be interesting to see how this market evolves since Linux, and other OS'es have more of a fair chance against Microsoft here than on the Desktop market. Even so I expect Windows Mobile to have a great advantage due to it's high degree of
NOT too late for PalmSource? (Score:1)
Microsoft's success in this area is far from assured. I can honestly say that for every Microsoft smartphone I've seen someone use, I've seen five (well, probably even more) based on other platforms...and to put it plainly, the Microsoft-based super-phones totally suck. They are more expensive, firstly. They are physically huge in comparison to a Blackberry device, the user interfac
Wrong reasons, but some chances for PalmSource (Score:2, Insightful)
Then PalmSource is doomed. You can do all that with a generic closed handset.
PalmOS's value is the strong PDA integration and available third-party apps. You're right that a lot of users don't care about those benefits: Sanyo and Samsung sell better high-end multimedia phones that don't use PalmOS (or WinCE, or Symbian).
B
Re:Wrong reasons, but some chances for PalmSource (Score:2)
Actually, I think cellphone companies would LOVE to have "rich, extensible devices". When I referred to "circumventing their revenue-generating content-delivery system" I meant in terms of USER-CONTROLLED extensibility--most notably the ability for hobbyists to "hack" their smartphones and plug in their own programs via a loc
Re:will it be too late for PalmSource? (Score:1)
They fit... (Score:1)
PINE (Score:2)
Gain a foothold? (Score:4, Informative)
The Treo 600 was pretty popular, the Treo 650 is incredibly popular (and is getting huge amounts of product placement in TV shows and movies - even teenagers are packing 650s in Smallville!
BTW, a Linux-based PalmOS isn't exactly new news - it's been known for quite a while that the next generation of PalmOS was going to be based on Linux.
Re:Gain a foothold? (Score:2)
Only in the US.
Re:Gain a foothold? (Score:2)
Re:Gain a foothold? (Score:2)
Re:Future of PalmOne? (Score:1)
Great... single tasking, crashing phones (Score:1)
Now, not only will my new phone be unable to run more than one task at the same time, but it'll also crash a few times a week.
too little, too late (Score:1)
What PalmSource needs to do is license an embedded Linux OS (embedix, maybe?) or create their own, pretty up the GUI, port their killer apps and come out as a major alternative to Windows Mobile. I would gladly purchase a Linux handheld i
never too late (Score:2)
Windows Mobile has won (Score:2, Insightful)
I say, good riddance. As much as I loved my Palm III, those days are gone and Palm has been wandering aimlessly chasing one target after another and making all kinds of ridiculous mistakes.
As much as I disagree, the market has chosen features over minimalism (it always does, BTW). No matter how ridiculous it is to watch movies on a 4" sc
Re:Windows Mobile has won (Score:1)
Have you seen the treo 650? I watch movies on it on it's screen.
What was your point again? Because I have no idea, but you seem so intent on something, I really am curious
For the record, I don't think the 700w is a bad thing - there are people that will always use MacOS and people who will always use Windows, would it be bad for Dell to sell them both the hardware? Because that's how the PalmSource / Palm relationship is now. Palm can sell everyone t
Re:Windows Mobile has won (Score:2)
Thank you. You have a nice day too.
I was not talking about Palm, the hardware company. Those guys will survive - they pr
Re:Windows Mobile has won (Score:1)
I see it a bit different though, miniaturization being what it is, and the Treo 650 already being so close to a general purpose computer, we'll just see those bizarre MIT Media Lab / Snowcrash gargoyle visions come to pass. And you just can't keep Linux off general-purpose computers - price pressures dictate standardization which dictates open interfaces, and the next thing you know, there's Linux and the BSDs running happily on them.
All
won again? ha ha ha. (Score:3, Insightful)
Steve, just promise me you won't break any chairs of fucking kill anyone when your little wet dream does not work any better than Xbox or tablet PCs.
the market has chosen features over minimalism (it always does, BTW). No matter how ridiculous it is to watch movies on a 4" screen, this is w
Re:won again? ha ha ha. (Score:2)
Re:won again? ha ha ha. (Score:2)
Facing such an impeccable logic, I cannot really argue. You won.
Re:Windows Mobile has won (Score:2)
Re:Windows Mobile has won (Score:2)
The 700w is a good move for PALM. Not PalmSource. Nothing says "we're here to make hardware" like running the other guy's OS.
Oh, and I've got a pair of PDAs that I regularly watch movies or recorded TVs on. Both from Palm. Both, although plauged by an eargly-adopter syndrome (LifeDrive), work as fine and simply as anything I've ever had.
Re:Windows Mobile has won (Score:1)
I know a lot of people that want an uncrashable PDA with support for simple games, books and low power consumption.
For example, I've switched from a Toshiba e310 to a Palm Zire 71, then to a Sony Clie SJ22 and a separate cd-mp3 player for music.
Third-Party Developers (Score:2)
So far, Linux phones like the Motorola ones and many based on QTopia have been met with resentment by 3rd party devs. OpenEZX laments that it can't even access certain functionality thro
Foothold? (Score:2)
Well, in my opinion the three best smartphones on the market right now are the Sony P910i, the Treo 650, and the HTC Magician, so they have some sort of a foothold.
Single Core? (Score:1)
Symbian was sold on 10.9 million handsets in the last quarter - making it an attractive target for developers such as myself. I am not denying Palm's product could be awesome but it seems to have a hell
Re:Single Core? (Score:2)
I totally disagree. While Symbian may have sold 10.9 million handsets, how many of these are bought by people that don't even know what Symbian means? I'm sure most of those handsets are used by people that have never installed a Symbian app and only use it as a standard phone.