Doomed MeeGo tablet revealed with Verizon-bound N9

It’s a rare opportunity that’s been taken advantage of this week with the now near-dead mobile operating system MeeGo’s former developers being rounded up and interviewed for a pack of information that gives us all a look into its short-lived dreams. It’s Finnish site Taskumuro that has this set of interviews turned into a history of MeeGo complete with what essentially amounts to confirmation that Nokia was planning on bringing the Nokia N9 with MeeGo to Verizon – and that they had a tablet in the works as well. Wouldn’t it be nice?

If you’ll take a look back at our original Nokia N9 review from several months ago, you’ll find that Chris Davies’ assessment of the device (“Seldom are we so reluctant to part with a review unit”) was more than just a little leaning towards the positive side. Because the software Nokia’s former MeeGo team were working on was – and in some cases, still is – so lovely and not like anything else out there at the moment, we’ve got to pause and wonder what might have been had it taken off. One of the items of big interest here is the Senna tablet.

This tablet was obviously meant to replicate the better points of the N9 with design cues galore, rounded corners and vast, simple movements in hardware all around. You’ve got the ability to shoot 1080p video on the back, a ST-Ericsson’s NovaThor U8500-based platform on its innards, and a public version of MeeGo right up front. The user interface is said to have been essentially the same as the N9, just blown up a bit.

The account also makes it clear that the Senna tablet was presented to Nokia CEO Stephen Elop back in 2010 where it was praised by him initially. Once the MeeGo strategy was stopped entirely, so went the tablet as well. Another of the bigger reveals here from Taskumuo is the existence of Nokia model RM-716. This device was essentially the Nokia N9 made for Verizon – but without 4G LTE, it was also doomed to fail before it got off the ground.

As we all know, Nokia went with Microsoft’s loving embrace less than a year ago, bringing forth a collection of Windows Phone devices here and there ever since. The newest range of Windows Phone 8 devices from Nokia have generated quite a bit of interest as far as we’ve seen, and we’re more than a bit pumped up about their delivery here in the Autumn of 2012. In this season we’ll likely see big movements in Nokia’s market share up or down – it’s all up to Windows Phone 8 and its ties with Windows 8 – and Microsoft backing the colorful manufacturer up, of course.


Doomed MeeGo tablet revealed with Verizon-bound N9 is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Behind the scenes history of MeeGo reveals Nokia’s abandoned tablet and Verizon N9

Behindthescenes history of Meego reveals

Finnish site Taskumuro has produced an incredibly detailed behind-the-scenes history of Nokia’s wonderful, yet doomed, MeeGo OS. Talking to current and ex-employees of the phone maker, it learned that a tablet (codenamed Senna) and CDMA Nokia N9 for Verizon were both in development before Stephen Elop killed the project dead around the time of the “burning platform” memo. The report also claims that the company’s decision to develop Maemo (later MeeGo) in tandem with Symbian led to a developer turf-war, that the Swipe UI was cooked up at the 80/20 Design Studio in New York and the team had planned an Apple-esque strategy of releasing a single phone every year. If you’d like to learn more (and about how the original article was translated from Finnish into English in under 10 hours), head on down to the source links.

[Thanks, Masa and Justus]

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Behind the scenes history of MeeGo reveals Nokia’s abandoned tablet and Verizon N9 originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 11 Oct 2012 10:49:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Jolla confirms first Sailfish OS demo on November 21st, device details by Christmas

Jolla logo

Jolla had already mentioned that it would show its MeeGo-derived Sailfish OS in November, but the startup now has exact dates to mark on the calendar. Come November 21st and 22nd, we’ll get a peek at Jolla’s take on the open platform’s interface, apps and SDK at the Slush conference in Helsinki. There won’t be much hardware to see, however. Jolla plans to provide the first phone details and launch window before Christmas, which doesn’t give much if any time for initial partners like D.Phone to get moving. We’d expect a more formal launch in the new year.

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Jolla confirms first Sailfish OS demo on November 21st, device details by Christmas originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 04 Oct 2012 14:42:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Jolla to release custom Sailfish MeeGo version with hardware next month

Jolla is said to have plans to roll out a custom MeeGo version known as Sailfish alongside relevant hardware sometime next month. Having access to more than 200 million pounds of funding (that’s certainly a whole lot of money to play around with!), Jolla managed to rope in interested hardware partners and also achieved progress and improvements to the operating system. The Wall Street Journal reported that Jolla has also penciled in plans to have the first piece of hardware out on the market sometime in November, making the cut quite comfortably on time for Black Friday as well as the potentially mad rush during the holiday season.

It is said that the Sailfish fork of MeeGo will continue to ply the open source route, where it will be made available readily to OEMs for installation on their hardware. Jolla will not share all of their secrets though, but will retain select segments of the UI elements as proprietary material, pretty much similar to how Google keeps a fair number of Google portions of the operating system closed source while maintaining an open source OS at the same time. What you see above reminds us of better times when Nokia and MeeGo were on good terms.

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Jolla intends to keep the MeeGo flag flying, Jolla concept device whets your appetite,

Jolla resurrects MeeGo with new “Sailfish” OS

About a year ago, a project to develop a new mobile operating system called MeeGo was cancelled in favor of Tizen. Then, back in July, we were told that a group of Nokia ex-employees formed a startup called Jolla and would be reviving MeeGo. Fast forward to today, and we’re now told that the Finnish-based company is getting funding to develop a new operating system based on MeeGo.

Jolla is receiving €200 million in funding to develop and release a MeeGo-based mobile operating system codenamed “Sailfish.” The funding will come from a number of different partners in Jolla’s newly-established ecosystem alliance.

Jolla confirmed its upcoming MeeGo OS will be ready for licensing by device manufacturers and service providers by spring 2013. However, the company is planning to put a lot of its focus on the Chinese market. It will have its data center facility located in Hong Kong, where it will store Jolla’s data and provide cloud services, and they plan on conducting most of their research and development in Hong Kong as well.

The upcoming MeeGo OS will be completely open-source, and Jolla says that the new OS will be immune to constant patent wars that are saturating the mobile market. Jolla’s head Jussi Hurmola says that the patent lawsuits between Samsung and Apple are actually benefiting the company, since they’re based on an independent operating system and are said to be implementing a completely new UI.

[via ZDNet]


Jolla resurrects MeeGo with new “Sailfish” OS is written by Craig Lloyd & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Jolla resuscitates MeeGo with ‘Sailfish’ OS, plans to show off new device this November

Jolla resuscitates MeeGo with 'Sailfish' OS, plans to show off new device this November

If competition breeds innovation, then there’s plenty promise in this latest mobile development from Jolla. The Finnish company, comprised of former Nokia employees, is poised to enter yet another combatant to the wireless arena with a MeeGo-based OS, codenamed “Sailfish,” as early as this November. According to The Wall Street Journal, an initial round of funding has raised €200 million to push the effort forward and the small start-up is investing €10 million of its own to bolster the platform’s prospects. Having been recently abandoned by Elop and co. after the arrival of the N9, this iteration of the operating system will continue to be open source and should pave the way for OEM adoption, although certain aspects of the UI will be licensed. According to CEO Jussi Hurmola, the new hardware’s expected to hit next month — just in time for a glut of other smartphone bows. Until then, we’ll reserve our judgment and hope for the best.

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Jolla resuscitates MeeGo with ‘Sailfish’ OS, plans to show off new device this November originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 02 Oct 2012 11:37:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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MeeGo Startup, Jolla, Zeroes In On China, Expects €200M Ecosystem Backing From Hong Kong Alliance

jolla_color

Jolla, the plucky Finnish mobile startup that’s largely comprised of talent cast off by Nokia as it slimmed down its own software development operations (in favour of leaning on Microsoft’s), has announced it’s setting up an alliance that will back its forthcoming MeeGo-based OS — codenamed Sailfish and due to be ready for licensing in spring 2013 — and help speed the growth of an ecosystem around it.

Jolla’s release does not detail exactly who is involved in the alliance — beyond citing “leading players in the industry” — but we’ve asked for more details and will update if we hear back. The company also says it anticipates membership of the alliance growing — name-checking as possible partners “chipset vendors, OEM and ODM manufacturers, operators and retailers”.

The alliance will be contributing €200 million ($259 million) to expedite growth of the Sailfish ecosystem, according to Jolla — although it notes that this investment will come in gradually, rather than as immediate financial backing.

The alliance partners will be investing an estimated 200 million euros to ensure the success and rapid expansion of the new ecosystem. The 200M€ ecosystem financing will come in gradually from Jolla and as members join the alliance, which will include chipset vendors, OEM and ODM manufacturers, operators and retailers.

The alliance is being established in Hong Kong — which continues the nascent mobile-maker’s focus on China. Jolla hasn’t released any smartphones yet — or indeed other MeeGo-based devices — but back in July it signed a sales and distribution deal with Chinese mobile phone retailer D.Phone. It it is also establishing R&D operations in Hong Kong and elsewhere in China.

“China is a game changer in the technology industry,” said Jussi Hurmola, CEO of Jolla, in a statement. “The next big mobile change will come from China and Jolla wants to be enabling it. There are massive resources and competence to transport the whole industry.”

Jolla has chosen Cyberport Hong Kong to host the Sailfish alliance data centre — noting

The data centre is being established to host Sailfish’s infrastructure, data, productisation facilities and collaboration services. In addition, some of the upcoming ecosystem’s cloud services will be provided from there. The OS and UX are highly scalable and will support smartphones, tablets, televisions, automotive and other device classes.

MeeGo was formed back in 2010 by Nokia in partnership with Intel (merging their respective Maemo and Moblin Linux-based OS efforts) — but subsequently jettisoned by Nokia when it decided to focus on Microsoft’s Windows Phone OS as its primary smartphone platform.


Unreleased Nokia Lauta QWERTY slider emerges, shows where MeeGo might have tread

Unreleased Nokia Lauta QWERTY slider emerges, shows the MeeGo future that never was

Those of us who remember Nokia’s late-stage MeeGo phone development will recall how the dreams fell apart: we got the N9 and the developer-tuned N950, but the future grew dark almost immediately as Nokia swung its attention further towards Windows Phone. If MyNokiaBlog‘s prototype leak is accurate, however, the engineers in Espoo had planned at least one more MeeGo phone for the general public: meet the Lauta, or RM-742. It would have been an “immediate” follow-up to the N9 that brought a tilting, sliding QWERTY keyboard to the party, with performance identical to its touch-only sibling. Nokia was reportedly committed enough that it had fully functional prototypes and had penciled in a fall 2011 release to give the N9 some company. We don’t really know why Nokia scrapped the Lauta, although it’s not difficult to surmise that the company wanted to simplify its lineup at a time when profits were falling fast. The real tragedy may not be so much the decision to axe the Lauta as the absence of a true heir to what it represented — between Nokia’s public silence and recent departures from the relevant software team, MeeGo’s future is more in doubt than ever.

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Unreleased Nokia Lauta QWERTY slider emerges, shows where MeeGo might have tread originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 04 Sep 2012 12:40:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Mobile Miscellany: week of August 20th, 2012

Mobile Miscellany week of August 20th, 2012

Not all mobile news is destined for the front page, but if you’re like us and really want to know what’s going on, then you’ve come to the right place. This past week was a bit slow, but we’ve managed to dig up a couple interesting MeeGo tidbits, along with an excellent utility for Nexus 7 / OS X users — something to help you in the pursuit of slack. These stories and more await after the break. So buy the ticket and take the ride as we explore the “best of the rest” for this week of August 20th, 2012.

Continue reading Mobile Miscellany: week of August 20th, 2012

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Mobile Miscellany: week of August 20th, 2012 originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 25 Aug 2012 21:15:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Jolla’s MeeGo phone will run Android apps

Jolla, the Helsinki-based startup hoping to make use of Nokia’s abandoned MeeGo platform, has revealed additional details surrounding the phone it hopes to launch later in the year. Arctic Startup quotes publication 3T in detailing Jolla’s plans, with the company’s CEO, Jussi Hurmola, saying that the new OS will run HTML5 apps in addition to Qt apps. Not only that, but it looks like Jolla will employ one of RIM’s tactics for the BlackBerry PlayBook, hoping to run Android apps in addition to its own native offerings.

The company plans to do so via an application compatibility layer. That will allow apps to run without any issues on MeeGo, with OpenMobile, the company behind the ACL, saying that there’s no performance loss. Apps should also behave correctly as the software makes use of the Android runtime environment and Dalvik virtual machine, allowing for full compatibility.

Jolla also revealed that its first smartphone will come with a screen size of 3.5-inches, an interesting move given the shift in the market towards larger screens on smartphones. Even the upcoming iPhone is rumored to have a larger screen size, coming in at 4-inches compared to the 3.5-inch size used on previous iPhones. Bigger isn’t always better, however, and plenty of consumers are happy with the 3.5-inch form factor: Jolla could be looking to take advantage of that, and there’s nothing stopping the company releasing multiple devices with different sizes.

Jolla is comprised of ex-Nokia employees looking to leverage the MeeGo operating system, with the company formed at the beginning of July. Nokia only managed to get one MeeGo phone out of the door, the Nokia N9, before switching over to Windows Phone for the Lumia 800 and 900. Jolla has faith in the MeeGo operating system, believing that development “deserves to be continued”. How much success the company will have in an already crowded market remains to be seen.

UPDATE: Arctic Startup mistranslated the original article, noting that Jolla’s first smartphone will in fact have a screen larger than 3.5-inches. An exact size wasn’t given, however.

[via fonearena]


Jolla’s MeeGo phone will run Android apps is written by Ben Kersey & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.