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Open Source Phone on the Way

prostoalex writes "Dr. Dobb's Journal reports on GPE Palmtop Environment's aim to create a full stack of open source software for mobile phones. Mobile operator Orange and France Telecom are contributing to the project. The goal is to have a fully featured mobile handset with applications like instant messaging and email, with only a portion of the price."

21 of 66 comments (clear)

  1. "New" my foot. by utopianfiat · · Score: 2, Informative
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    +5, Truth
    1. Re:"New" my foot. by zanglang · · Score: 2, Informative
      That's Trolltech's Greenphone, GPE is a different project:
       

      GPE is committed to the Open Source idea. All GPE core components are released under GNU licenses, applications using the GPL and shared libraries using the LGPL. Those allow for the most free usability of the GPE system. http://gpe.handhelds.org/
  2. Inevitable Commodity Item by KrackHouse · · Score: 2, Interesting

    In five years when the hardware costs 38cents for these there is no doubt that vendors will avoid paying a hefty fee for the software or they won't be able to compete. I just hope Google gets around to building free wireless internet. Kids will not know what a phone is in 10 years.

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    1. Re:Inevitable Commodity Item by edwardpickman · · Score: 4, Funny
      Kids will not know what a phone is in 10 years.

      That's just silly. Kids still know what a vinyl record and 8 track tapes are....Second thought strike that.

  3. Call me Old Fashioned, but... by camperdave · · Score: 4, Funny

    Call me old fashioned, but when I read the title Open Source Phone on the Way, I immediately thought of one of these and thought, "What's to open source? There are plans all over the internet already."

    --
    When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
  4. Interesting thought by Raul654 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I'm curious - would it be possible to tweak something like this to do end-to-end encryption? (To make sure certain government agencies with three letter acronyms aren't listening in). Something like fast symmetric key encryption, using Diffie-Hellman key exchange?

    --


    To make laws that man cannot, and will not obey, serves to bring all law into contempt.
    --E.C. Stanton
    1. Re:Interesting thought by ArcherB · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'm curious - would it be possible to tweak something like this to do end-to-end encryption? (To make sure certain government agencies with three letter acronyms aren't listening in). Something like fast symmetric key encryption, using Diffie-Hellman key exchange?

      Yeah, I'm sure the NSA has nothing better to do but listen to your phone calls.

      Seriously, I had no idea that half the population works for the NSA. They must because it would literally take half (or more) of the population to watch the other half. When do we get the half time show and switch sides?

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    2. Re:Interesting thought by networkBoy · · Score: 3, Informative

      No, the NSA'a computers monitor the communications, the people monitor the computers, which have a list of keywords likely weighted. once a conversation gets too "heavy" a human monitor gets involved.
      Um... at least that's how I'd do it.
      -nB

      --
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  5. For more information... by PCM2 · · Score: 4, Funny
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    Breakfast served all day!
  6. Now a phone! by ArcherB · · Score: 3, Funny

    Good, because I'm running out of things to run Linux on around here!

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    There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
  7. iPhone by adambha · · Score: 2, Interesting

    With a nice piece of hardware like the iPhone this project could be 'toyed' with in many ways. Then again, it may not matter.

    And let's not forget that an open source project many not be the first choice for a top-dollar piece of hardware.

  8. No not everyone by Weezul · · Score: 2, Insightful

    But I'm a really interesting person!

    i.e. who just happens to run a company competing with some company in some powerful senators state.

    --
    The Christian religion has been and still is the principal enemy of moral progress in the world. -- Bertrand Russell
  9. reducing duplication of efforts? by straponego · · Score: 2, Informative
    I'm going to take the rare step of admitting that I could be wrong on a lot of this. People who know more about these issues are invited to correct me.

    This looks like a good thing, but I've noticed that there are several different similar efforts out there. There's Maemo for the Nokia tablets, OpenMoko for the Neo1973 (which is the closest I've seen to what I want in a phone), the Motorola Linux stuff, and this. I'm sure there will be some cross-pollination, but this seems like something that a consortium of phone makers or maybe Google could really push along quickly. How? Either by providing build servers which would build executables for the target environments, or providing emulators. Yeah, it's going to be hard to emulate the actual telecom functionality, but I think a majority of applications for these devices will not use those.

    The reason I mentioned Google is that I believe they're doing something similar already, though a quick search didn't turn up what I remembered. IBM, Intel, or OSDN might be other good candidates.

    Or are these different platforms using such different APIs for things like graphics toolkits that I'm smoking crack here?

    1. Re:reducing duplication of efforts? by adfour · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Openmoko can be build on Openembedded, afaik, which can be run on your desktop-- be your own build server. Isn't that the whole idea?

  10. Re:No opensource mobile phone by retro128 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'm not really sure an "open source" phone is possible. These things are too miniaturized to be able to build in your garage. There are guys out there who build their own GSM phones, but these things are not something you can carry around in your pocket.

    Hopefully, Open software for phones will fall a "build it, and they will come" path. Coming from the US, I hate how every phone is branded to a particular company. You have to jump through hoops to unlock it to use with another provider, if it's even possible at all. The phones are almost always crippled, too - Verizon disables a lot of the Bluetooth functions on their phones unless you pay to unlock them. If you want a new software Feature X on your phone, you pretty much have to throw it out and buy a new one with Feature X on it. Buying a phone is a game where you have to choose between what you want and what you can live without. Choose carefully, because you're going to be stuck with the phone for two years unless you want to pay $500 for it to go month to month. It's total bullcrap.

    It'd be really nice if companies would start rolling out phones designed to work on an open platform, like what FIC did with the Neo1973.

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    -R
  11. Open source doesn't mean unlocked device. by gd23ka · · Score: 3, Informative

    Just because they're using open source code and even give you whatever
    source they have to give you, doesn't mean the device is "open" as in
    you can change any binaries or config settings, add or remove software
    etc. All the GPL forces them to do is to publish their source code
    modifications / additions where it applies. It doesn't force them to
    deliver the binaries on a device that allows modification of that code.

  12. A phone ? No. by edavid · · Score: 2, Insightful

    For me IM, email, has nothing to do on a phone. I want a phone to make phone calls, that's all. This device will be at the same time too big for a phone annd too small for a device with hand entry and screen to read.
    the fact that it uses free software is irrelevant. But it is the big trend with some free software projects (gnome, GPE being some of them) to just copy, add no innovation but just say "hey we're free". A free copy of a bad idea will still be a bad idea.

  13. Dup. And the first real Open Source effort. by btarval · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Well, honestly, every year (over the past couple of years at least) has seen several companies or groups claiming to be the first Open Source cell phone effort.

    The GPE project is no exception. They are predated by about a couple of years by OpenEZX . It appears to have been around since 2005.

    GPE might be bringing more applications to the party. And more P.R.. But they just aren't the first.

    Oh, and this article is basically a dup of the previous announcement: http://linux.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=07/02/05/ 130208. Granted, this is a reposting from Dr. Dobbs. But it's basically the same info.

    Last year, it was Trolltech. And as you note, it isn't fully open. Furthermore, it's closed in arguably the most critical fashion. Namely, the device driver. Unfortunately, Trolltech selected a Broadcom chip. And if you've ever worked with Broadcom, this is a very bad sign. Their software quality sucks big time. So there are probably buffer overflows and other problems in the driver which just won't ever get fixed.

    Then there have been the Java phones that have been touting BS about being an "Open Source" phone (one of them actually won an award a year ago as an "Open Source" phone at JavaOne). The only thing Open Source is the application layer, not the OS or the low level hardware. But again, each of them issues a Press Release proclaiming to be the first Open Source phone, and the media gobbles it up.

    I've forgotten the other claims. But every 6-12 months, there's yet another group and another announcement.

    So, yes, this is a lot of hoopla. And IMHO, it's a discredit to the GPE group to be making this noise. They should be honest if they want credibility.

    But IMHO, this is all yesterday's news. The most interesting thing currently going on is the Open Source Software and HARDWARE effort being done by The Homebrew Mobile Phone Club . The effort here is to release everything, including schematics, so that anyone can use COTS parts to build their own cellphone, from scratch.

    But regardless of who was first, it is very nice to see all of these efforts going into finally opening up the cell phone market. This is a far cry from where things were 5 years ago.

    --
    The best way to predict the future is to create it. - Peter Drucker.
  14. Homebrew link by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The link you gave for the Homebrew Mobile Phone Club is broken, but here's a working one.

  15. Abandoned and Expired Patents Should be Added by Patent-Monkey · · Score: 2, Informative

    It'll take a bit of work to assemble everything relevant to cell phones, but we've got a tool that shows which patents are expired or abandoned. Here is a list of expired or abandoned cell phone patents we've got as a starter and will add to it as we go. Some aren't that great, think of it as a 'bargain bin'. :P I agree that cell phones have many possibilities and we should use the patent system as an advantage for this.

  16. Re:And then there's OpenMoko by walter_f · · Score: 4, Informative

    http://www.openmoko.com/press/index.html
    http://www.openmoko.com/press/index.html#pictures

    which is a truly open platform based on all GPL'd software.

    The first hardware using OpenMoko, the Neo1973 Smartphone by Taiwan's FIC, will be available to the public soon.

    http://planet.openmoko.org/

    Walter.