Follow Slashdot stories on Twitter

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Android IOS Technology

KaiOS Takes on the iOS-Android Mobile Duopoly (economist.com) 58

An anonymous reader shares a report: Firefox browser made by the non-profit Mozilla Foundation, was born as "Phoenix." It rose from the ashes of Netscape Navigator, slain by Microsoft's Internet Explorer. In 2012 Mozilla created Firefox OS, to rival Apple's iOS and Google's Android mobile operating systems. Unable to compete with the duopoly, Mozilla killed the project. Another phoenix has arisen from it [Editor's note: the link may be paywalled]. KaiOS, an operating system conjured from the defunct software, powered 30m devices in 2017 and another 50m in 2018. Most were simple flip-phones sold in the West for about $80 apiece, or even simpler ones which Indians and Indonesians can have for as little as $20 or $7, respectively.

Smartphones start at about $100. The company behind the software, also called KaiOS and based in Hong Kong, designed it for smart-ish phones -- with an old-fashioned number pad and long battery life, plus 4G connectivity, popular apps such as Facebook and modern features like contactless payments, but not snazzy touchscreens. Most such devices are found in India. Reliance Jio, a network that has upended the local mobile industry with heavily discounted 4G data plans, sells subsidised, Jio-branded phones that use KaiOS software. Google, which invested $22m in Kaios last year, prioritises getting people in emerging markets online, where it can sell their attention to advertisers, over getting them onto Android smartphones. Smart-ish phones help with this.

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

KaiOS Takes on the iOS-Android Mobile Duopoly

Comments Filter:
  • by weilawei ( 897823 ) on Friday April 26, 2019 @11:17AM (#58496308)

    with an old-fashioned number pad and long battery life, plus 4G connectivity, popular apps such as Facebook and modern features like contactless payments, but not snazzy touchscreens.

    Where do I buy one? ;) Why are these not marketed here?

    • You can buy them on Amazon, look for feature phones or candbar phones. Some even have GPS.

    • They ARE marketed here.

      The Alcatel Go Flip is supplied by Sprint. I own one.

      The reason you don't hear about it is quite simple: the KaiOS software is total, complete, utter, absolute CRAP.

      It works. MOST of the time. It periodically locks up, to the point that the only way to reset it is to PULL THE BACK COVER OFF AND YANK THE BATTERY. This has to be done EVERY FEW DAYS OR SO.

      I usually discover that it has locked up when it rings for an incoming call, I open the phone, and I see a complete white screen,

  • "Sell their attention" hoorah!

    This news also brings us a snappy, descriptive, replacement for the disgusting "Sell their eyeballs" metaphor.

  • "Codeville"...so appropriate. :-)

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

  • by Gilgaron ( 575091 ) on Friday April 26, 2019 @11:57AM (#58496540)
    So now that hardware sales for phones have slumped will we see them get more like computers where you can just buy one and put whatever OS on it you want?
  • by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Friday April 26, 2019 @12:07PM (#58496590)

    I already have a smartphone, but I would certainly be interested in trying a phone that met the description given... if it actually worked well and had multi-day battery life.

    A phone that could serve as a hotspot, could securely offer NFC payments, handled calendaring intelligently, and supported secure messaging of some sort (which wasn't a pain to type) - that's really all I need for a phone. I like to play things like Words with Friends and browsing the web, but I much prefer my iPad Mini for that sort of stuff.

    As always, though, the devil is in the details. Have to use a T9 keyboard for messaging? No thank you. Is the vendor vacuuming up all your personal info and behavior? Might as well just have a smartphone.

    • You never have to use T9, it was a quicker option than standard texting. I loved T9 and could text much faster than with just clicks, but I could also do either without looking at my phone.

  • by ctilsie242 ( 4841247 ) on Friday April 26, 2019 @12:09PM (#58496600)

    This may be ancient history, but one of the reasons Palm did so well with their PDAs, was, unlike Windows Mobile, their OS was simple, to the point, and was not intended to bristle with features. It did eventually suffer from feature creep, but even now, the Palm V still is something that has a timeless quality about it, especially because only the buttons are plastic.

    Maybe we need a return to that. It would be nice to have a phone that has a week standby time again.

  • by PopeRatzo ( 965947 ) on Friday April 26, 2019 @12:13PM (#58496620) Journal

    Am I the only one who thinks they really missed an opportunity by not naming it "KaOS"? I'm thinking it would have been an obvious choice for a product they hope will disrupt the mobile OS marketplace.

    https://youtu.be/zclelXTZVc4 [youtu.be]

  • This project makes much more sense to me: https://e.foundation/ [e.foundation] And is compatible with any Android app. And it won't be purchased by Google like KaiOS will probably be (Google invested several millions in KaiOS)
  • Tough hill to climb (Score:5, Interesting)

    by xleeko ( 551231 ) on Friday April 26, 2019 @12:27PM (#58496704)

    I recently experienced KaiOS in the form of an Alcatel GO Flip, which I used to replace an old LG flip phone.

    It looked pretty, but my day-to-day experience was terrible. For example, open the phone to check the time and wait 2-3 sec for the display to come on and update the time from what it was when you last opened the phone (?!?!) As a longtime flip phone user, I enjoyed my week-long gaps between charges, but this thing barely went a day and a half.

    The interface had many features, like custom ring tones for particular callers, which never actually worked. The thing that drove me absolutely nuts though, was bluetooth pairing. I paired it to my car so that I could answer calls. Whenever I got in the car, it popped up a screen asking whether the car could access the phone contacts. Every. single. time. That screen would persist until I clicked yes or no, and you couldn't do anything until you did so. Used the car a couple hours ago? Want to check the time now? Click through that damn screen.

    I have come to understand that they settled on HTML 5 for all of the UI stuff on the phone. Makes sense, but seems to be a high fixed cost for small things. Overall, I wanted to like it, and it has a lot of promise, but shows how crucial UX work is for mass market things.

    • by Areyoukiddingme ( 1289470 ) on Friday April 26, 2019 @01:12PM (#58496988)

      I have come to understand that they settled on HTML 5 for all of the UI stuff on the phone. Makes sense, but seems to be a high fixed cost for small things.

      It makes no sense at all. Portable pocket-sized devices have extremely limited amounts of power available. HTML 5 was designed to use ALL the power. It's a stupidly heavyweight "solution" to a problem that can be solved beautifully in C.

      Week long battery life in a candybar touchscreen is possible today. Modern lithium batteries really do have a lot of energy in them compared to even a decade ago. But the software has to not be an utter pig. Which means it can't be iOS or Android or KaiOS. It can't be motherfucking Javascript or Java. It needs to be compiled code, for the CPU in the phone, with all the compiler optimizations cranked up to 11 (or 3, as the case may be).

      It is not actually required for software to expand to use all available computational resources. We could do better.

      • by xleeko ( 551231 )

        It makes no sense at all. Portable pocket-sized devices have extremely limited amounts of power available. HTML 5 was designed to use ALL the power. It's a stupidly heavyweight "solution" to a problem that can be solved beautifully in C.

        I completely agree with you from a technical perspective, however from a business perspective, they need to quickly reach parity with the wide variety of things already available for iOS and Android. Most of those apps already have a plain web version that uses HTML 5. Now, can they make it work well enough on low end hardware? My experience says not yet, but I still recognize it as a rational choice.

  • Smartphones start at about $100.

    Wat? Candybar smartphones running Android, with full Google services, start at $29 [walmart.com] plus tax. Around Black Friday, they're $20. They're carrier-locked for a few years and their battery life absolutely sucks, but they exist and they work.

  • Google "can sell their attention to advertisers"
    In the eyes of business people, this software/hardware combo is a marketing tool. For the users in underdeveloped economies it is a survival tool. Without it they can't buy groceries or pay debts or connect to schools, jobs, government, etc.

    I argue that even a $500 smartphone in the first world should be free. It is still a marketing tool, and the wealthier users will be spending much more with it. And of course the premium smartphones should cost far less whe

  • by Guspaz ( 556486 ) on Friday April 26, 2019 @01:08PM (#58496964)

    Just like the other operating systems that have tried to compete against iOS/Android:

    - TizenOS
    - Windows Phone
    - webOS
    - FirefoxOS
    - Symbian
    - BlackBerry OS
    - BlackBerry 10
    - Sailfish OS
    - Pure OS
    - Ubuntu Touch
    - MeeGo
    - Bada

    But yes, I'm sure Kai OS will be the one to crack it.

  • Https://bllogsehat.blogspot.com
  • Google spoiled it (Score:4, Insightful)

    by barcarolle ( 581253 ) on Friday April 26, 2019 @01:25PM (#58497062)
    FirefoxOS had promise. KaiOS was an unknown quantity. Google having invested in it merely says they want to make sure it also drives business towards Analytics, so in the end who needs it?
  • Hello,

    My pal has a 12-year-old son, and she wants to buy him a phone. We tried last year and failed to find one that meets her requirements. I was pretty surprised we had no luck.

    We are in California and use one of the four mobile carriers broadly available, Tmobile. She wants the kid to have a phone without a browser. The phone needs to have a decent phone reception, so 4G. The olden days and the current nokias did not have 4G capable phones. Call it the Pre-4G era. Sort of inherent in a 4G capable p

  • I have a KaiOS flip phone. Love it for a lot of reasons like:
    * multi-day battery life
    * Great reception. (My S4 dropped all the time and my Motorola was garbage)
    * Tactile feedback when texting. I didn't have to look at the phone to text. And when I hit a button, that button was pressed. No pressing a letter on a touch screen and the letter next to it is selected!
    * Pre-programmed responses to common texting (eg: I'm on my way)
    * Plus many more.

    However, it has the same problem as Android. In the last eight year

"Everything should be made as simple as possible, but not simpler." -- Albert Einstein

Working...