Nokia Paying $10M For Symbian Software Devs
colordev writes "Yesterday Nokia and AT&T announced a mobile software coding contest worth $10 million in prize money. The move is intended to help Symbian compete with Android and iOS. The day before this announcement, Sony Ericsson said it would not be making any new Symbian devices and is instead focusing on Android. That left Nokia pretty much alone with Symbian, and now it wants to find new coding 'friends' to keep the platform alive. Natural selection seems to be slowly eroding Symbian's future. Is this contest too late?"
So, one of the "prizes" is 1.0M in marketing for you app, and premium placement in the app store. Don't forget YOU are responsible for ALL taxes. What would the tax be on the 1 million dollars of advertising?
Symbian? Did we time travel to 2004 again?
Yes.
Why's the evil one behind this?
Fuck systemd. Fuck Redhat. Fuck Soylent, too. Wait, scratch the last one.
The Grand Prize is only $100,000. Most of the "winners" just get some upcoming Nokia device. "Winning" means that the app receives "$1 million" in marketing promotion: "a Nokia press release, premium placement on Ovi Store, placement in Nokia digital and social media efforts, and direct consumer messaging via email and/or SMS." In other words, winning means Nokia spams for your app.
Nokia takes a 30% cut on sales through their "Ovi Store", so they're promoting themselves.
Nokia's total outlay on this "contest" is probably under $1 million.
1. Ditch the goal of moving Symbian to anything beyond dumb phones with cameras
2. Change the name of Meego to ANYTHING ELSE
3. Release Meego completely OSS and don't hamper people wanting to go in and tinker
4. Start rolling out both (Official stock) Android and Meego on devices and allow for the devices to switch back and forth between the two
5. Release a marketing campaign to choose 'the next look of Nokia'
6. Analyze which OS is getting better market traction and phase out the loser
7.Profit More!
Bye!
If history means anything, the market can only support so many different operating systems (3?). Even with a huge market like handsets and mobile devices, 5 maybe too many. Currently we have 6+ (in no particular order)
Symbian (Nokia)
Blackberry (RIM)
Android (Google)
iOS (Apple)
palmOS (HP)
WinMobile (Microsoft)
Only two of these are available from multiple hardware vendors, and it's hard to imagine new entrants MeeGo (Intel) and Bada (Samsung) gaining any sort of traction. Unlike desktops, hardware/software integration seems to be key in this market, which may mean iOS may have an upper hand. Or perhaps its ease of development, which favors Android or WinMobile. So those will be my pick for top 3. Sorry Nokia, it was good while it lasted. Thanks for the cute ringtone!
In Soviet Russia, articles before post read *you*!
Symbian has had the greatest market share for years. Nothing to be afraid of.
At this stage of the game, damn near everything about Nokia is "too late". This is a company on the brink of falling hard because of their failure to recognize a significant shift in the market and adapt in a timely manner (which can be said of RIM as well, imho).
Nokia has an excellent OS in Maemo/Meego, but still they keep beating this dead horse. Unbelievable. 'Nuff said.
I own an N900. The software needs more polish, but in all honesty it's pretty good, and despite it being a ubernerdphone targeted at developers and missing key elements (*cough* portrait mode), it comes surprisingly close to what a consumer would expect. As for non-technical people, my wife says she likes it more than iPhone.
I don't know why they don't just abandon Symbian and put all hands on MeeGo. The funny thing is, I've read lots of articles at various times saying that's their strategy. Yet they never seem to act on it. Instead they keep churning out Symbian devices.
I guess this is typical of a large bureaucratic company which takes its market positions for granted. To an outsider it looks like Nokia is flailing about like a wounded elephant, but from what I've read this probably represents some internal political struggle.
So if using Android is "like peeing in your pants to stay warm", what would be the appropriate urine-based analogy for this attempt to compete with Android?
Paying a million bums $10 each to pee on you, instead of in their own pants?
All that we see or seem is but a dream within a dream.
The mobile platform has taken over the mindshare of the public at large, so we writers and publishers need to be laser-focused on these apps and the phones that run them--mainly the iPhone and also Android phones from Motorola and others. RIM is trying to get into the act, and Nokia is out on a limb trying to do its own thing.
From this emerged the anomaly called the iPad. This whole idea was easy to condemn from the get-go. Time after time, pads have been attempted yet have never been popular. All have failed. So Apple pulls a fast one and takes two newer ideas and marries them to create the iPad. First it throws out the previous concepts regarding the tablet computer. No stylus, no handwriting recognition, no notepad qualities. Instead, it takes the iPhone and combines that with the Kindle, a pure e-book reader. Voila! The iPad.
This is actually a completely new model for a pad. It cannot be compared to the attempts of the past to popularize this physical style of platform. This is some serious fodder for writers and publishers. It's actually more interesting than the app- Phone because it is so weird. You cannot talk about this idea enough as far as the readers are concerned. And the phenomenal skyrocketing sales prove the point as the device becomes the fastest selling consumer electronics device ever.
As this device sells by the millions right out of the chute, one must recall the early days of the original ground-breaking Macintosh computer. The hoped-for goal back in 1984 was to try and sell 100,000 Macs in 90 days. Apple barely made it (if at all). Times have indeed changed. So if mobile apps and the iPad are the two hot topics for the next year or so, what else is out there?
There is the Internet and its gatekeeper, Google. This appears to be the only company working the Net that is doing anything interesting or noteworthy--not good. Microsoft has been marginalized and tries to get attention for Bing when it should be keeping people interested in desktop computing somehow. I'm not sure how to do this either, but Microsoft should be trying to figure it out. But it doesn't seem to care, despite the fact that this is the way it makes make most of its money.
So let's face it, unless something comes along sooner than later, all you'll be reading about is Apple, Google, Pad computing, app-phones, and not much else. Yeah, there will be the occasional story about an AMD chip with a funny name, or IBM thinking about cloud computing, or Larry Ellison of Oracle buying the new Lexus supercar.
The slate of articles sounds boring, and it is. But there is a benefit, too. Because the line-up is weak, writers and analysts will look elsewhere for human interest. And this falls right into the lap of laws, regulations and the effect of technology on the public-at-large. This means discussions of harmful effects, privacy, learning, computers in schools, computers and terrorism, automotive adop tion, tracking, surveillance, and on and on.
You can worry yourself sick about the paucity of interesting tech stories that do not involve an iPhone app, but there will be plenty to discuss, but it has now moved to the "big picture."
I've begun to notice this transition from nerd talk to serious debate over technology and society beginning a few years back. While a good gizmo with a picture attached will always get some attention, talking about how you may be getting screwed by technological trends seems to be more and more interesting to a wider and more diverse group of readers.
While tech mavens like myself could effortlessly ride out these trends by deconstructing the code-name conventions employed by Intel (I have done this a lot over the years), nowadays nobody cares. The usefulness of the barcode readers on the app-Phones, now that's worth discussing! But writing about how technology allows people to easily snoop on your TV-viewing habits might be even more interesting. Perhaps this is the age of the practical; we've had enough of geek talk. Hello iPad, let me smudge your screen. Are you spying on me, iPad? Hmmm...interesting.
Nokia is going to die unless they re-think their business model. Everyone else is making smartphones with Android, Windows Mobile or their own Linux flavour, with Apple being the trendsetter in mobile software platforms. Nokia has Meego, which would be the logical step forward and an immensely better development platform than Symbian, but the project is basically being kept in the dark with minimal funding, while the main company pushes for buggy Symbian phones with limited or no after-sales support. The Ovi store is a goddamn mess, the phones are buggy and eclipsed hardware-wise by the offerings of HTC, Samsung and Apple.
Perhaps we should be tagging Symbian stories 'deadhorse'?
If you need better software, then why not actually hire great developers to work for you? You know, like think about the quality of your product and dedicate resources to it over the medium-long term, rather than staging flashy gimmicks? I guess that just makes too much sense.
... and then they built the supercollider.
Retrofitting Symbian to compete with Android or iOS is folly. Correct me if I'm wrong, but the latter two are fundamentally Unix-based (iOS being a stripped down MacOS X, and Android running on a Linux kernel -- man it was weird to see a penguin and boot screen on a candy bar-sized object..). So they probably leave Symbian in the dust for robustness and reliability, by virtue of the size of each of the development communities alone. Then there's the issue of availability of development environments.
This is a last-ditch effort at best. If Nokia doesn't switch platforms soon, they are screwed.
--- The American Way of Life is not a birthright. Hell, it's not even sustainable.
Ditch Symbian, grab a copy of android os, rip the silly jvm out of it and put on a good native high performance interface and count me in.
Got Code?
I'll write it in finnish, maybe you'll understand
Youkkou makken greatikken harrdwwiikken, bukkut youkkour sooffwakkken ikkis krakkap. Frokkom a ukkuseeer poikkoint okkof viiikkew, Sykkimbian is okkkkay, but dekkevelokkkpers hakketen it. Ikkit is a hekkel to wrikkete for. Mokkove to Akkandroid alreakkidy
Nokia really needs to rebrand their mobile OS line. Every time I hear "Symbian" I think of some odd mechanical sex device.
I think they could do it, but I suspect that Symbian will become an also-ran with iOS, Android and Blackberry's new QNX-powered OS. It WAS good, but they don't have the marketshare nor, and more importantly, the mindshare, to fight it. What I don't understand is why they aren't looking at throwing themselves behind Android. Nokia owns QT, which is the base of KDE. Of anyone, you would think they would support a platform which would use their own stuff quite easily.
I call it 'The Aristocrats'
Nowhere in the contest says the app has to be only Symbian. It can be written using the WRT (web run time) with or without Flash Lite, the Java Runtime (which is also for S40, which is not Symbian), or much better: using Qt, which will be available on MeeGo (and who knows, in the future, the Android, WebOS or iOS port might be available as stable too... right now it looks that many Qt features are in a pretty good shape in Android despite being done only by community people).
I don't get why people still don't realize that the placement that Nokia is making of Qt is a very good move on them. Qt is a great API for creating applications, and now is going to be present on a huge number of Nokia devices (like it or not, Nokia sells tons of them, even with bad products like the N97).
try something like 76% of world wide smart phones have the symbian OS.
Here is a $10M idea - make an iPhone simulator that runs on the Nokia. Future proof.
Me too, but not for the same reasons
The problem is that they are coming very late to the "applications game", and they are trying to fit those applications on legacy devices with vastly differing capabilities from one another.
The reason Apple has been so successful here is that all of its devices have similar capabilities and screen resolution, so there is a common baseline for all of the applications to assume, and so from that you get applications capable of using the device capabilities better, rather than scaling back and having the "minimum" UI.
Even the one where the screen resolution is a bit off in "twice as big" mode, the iPad, is "close enough" that the applications for the other devices don't have a problem running with it. Going the other direction, Apple is going to start having a few problems, as people write specifically to the iPad capabilities. The aspect ratio isn't similar enough for "twice as small" to fit those applications on an iPhone/iPod screen. I expect that what will happen is that Apple will normalize the aspect ratio between the devices by changing the next iPhone/iPod to have the same aspect ratio to make the conversions "work".
Android faces similar issues to the legacy systems, which is lack of a standard minimum spanning set -- android doesn't dictate screen resolution, touch (or keyboard) capability, and so on. So Android isn't going to do any better in the applications market than Nokia, unless they address these issues so that the applications experience is actually good for the customer between devices.
Without requiring this sort of standardization of the application operating environment, the customer is stuck trying to figure out how to pick applications that will run on their devices and/or the developer is stuck porting (and testing) on a zillion devices to certify their application compatible, or (more likely), both happen. If so, you only get applications markets that are device-specific, and the developers (those which are willing to be developers in such an environment) will tend to target only the most popular devices to maximize their market size while minimizing their development outlay.
And this is exactly the same problem that a proliferation of APIs and kernel versions and so on have caused for the BSDs and Linux distributions which have largely kept the commercial software players away from trying to sell into those markets (hence things like "no iTunes for Linux", and Adobe specifically targetting one browser and one Linux distribution with their plugins).
-- Terry
Symbian is dead. If the new management at Nokia is any smarter than the old one, they will not waste any more money on Symbian but focus on MeeGo and getting the N9 out without any further delay. Nokia's future stands and falls with MeeGo. Period.
So the Symbian UI is 'dated' and 'old'. Well, guess what,pick up a Palm PDA from 1995, any Symbian handset and the American darlings, iOS/Android - and look at the way the UI is presented. What pray is so sexy or innovative about a gazillion icons presented in a scrolling view, as on the iPhone? Android does the same. So did Palm and so does Symbian/Nokia. Or is it the pretty transitions when you tilt the screen? Or the beveled edge buttons? GUIs have been about rows of icons to click on for ages. On a non touch mobile device, you use buttons to scroll/select while on a touchscreen you tap and slide your finger to scroll the display.
How many different ways is one to implement menus, checkboxes and radio buttons? Those are not going away any time soon. In 2006, Nokia introduced an optional new home screen that showed shortcuts to apps and alerts for new email/calendar appointments/nearby wifi networks. This is now far more customizable as in the upcoming Symbian^3, where you can have upto 3 homescreens with customizable widgets. Android also has something similar, but iOS as far as I've seen has no such native capability. That's not innovative?
Symbian has been designed from the ground up as an OS optimized for low CPU/memory usage, so it scales well from low to high end devices. It also has true preemptive multitasking since its 2002 debut- for example if there's too many apps open and there's an incoming call, the call takes priority over everything else and the OS will close a couple of background apps to free memory. Compare that with the hottest new Samsung Galaxy S which sometimes fails at receiving a basic phone call.. You can't control when the phone syncs data, or using what type of connection- you need an APNDroid hack to stop it syncing permanently in the background!! People rave about Snapdragon and gigahertz class CPUs for the newer Android devices, but the OS doesn't scale to lower specs at all. It practically requires a high powered CPU to power all that eyecandy.
Let's not even get started on the iPhone 4 antenna fiasco. Symbian has matured over 8 years and got the basics right - power management, multitasking, making calls,managing data connections over GPRS/3G/wifi/Bluetooth etc. It has also supported themes since its inception -there's hundreds of custom themes with different icons and colors available since then on various sites, so it's not like you're stuck with the look and feel that it ships with out of the box either. But well, superficial looks are all that matter in the end, apparently.
"..One hosts to look them up, one DNS to find them, and in the darkness BIND them."
This is more about Qt, not Symbian. Qt apps fit both to Symbian^3 and upcoming Symbian^4 plus Meego.
Android is missing good battery live. But it has the looks but it is not good for embedded devices like mobile phones at current stage.
disclaimer: The Android phone I own is running Android 1.5 with no options of update. I am currently not using it.
Symbian has good battery live, a rather clumsy user interface. But it is decent. It is stable (but it might be better).
Both of those have there good side and the bad. But I would still go with a Symbian phone if I can choose.
Is it not possible to have locked-down devices for the people who don't know what they are doing, and more powerful, open machines for those who do?
It was not possible in the video game market from roughly 1985, to 2006. After the NES took over from 8-bit home computers, video games were sharply divided between "console" platforms and "PC" platforms. PCs were open but couldn't output to an SDTV without an obscure adapter; consoles could output to a TV as a standard feature but weren't open. This began to change in 2006, with HDTVs gaining the ability to take VGA and DVI signals from PCs, though major PC game publishers appear not to have noticed the home theater PC market.
or is there some nefarious scheme in your worldview where Apple and Microsoft will somehow erase Linux from existence?
Imagine that the cable company and the phone company decide to protect their private networks by requiring home users to run approved antivirus software. But in order to make sure that the approved antivirus software is running, the customer will have to use a dialer that uses the Trusted Platform Module to make sure that an approved and unmodified operating system kernel is running. No approved kernel, no IP address. And good luck getting the phone company or the cable company to allow your preferred desktop Linux distribution onto its network. To learn the implications of Trusted Network Connect, check Alsee's posting history.
I believe the OSS moniker is for the developers, professional and amateur.
But does it matter to 90+ percent of home users whether amateur developers are allowed onto the platform? The video game console market says no.
android as a plataform allows the user (or the phone manufacturer) to install an alternative app store in place of android market, or even side-by-side with it.
But if it says "Android" on the box, an end user is going to expect to be able to download the same apps that his co-worker's Galaxy S family phone can access through Android Market. Right now, the end user can't officially install Android Market on an Android device other than a phone, and users on AT&T can't install an alternative market such as AppsLib due to the removal of "Unknown sources".
You also have to see past the US
It's expensive enough for a small shop developing applications for mobile devices to hire marketing and legal personnel for the United States and writers for English, let alone the countries and languages of Europe. The U.S. has more people per jurisdiction and more people per language.
Symbian as a real time operating system is far better suited for a mobile phone then Linux.
I guess there is a lot of confusion so lets clarify a little:
1) Kernel: Symbian Linux Mach
2) GUI: S60 Android Quartz
3) Company: NOKIA Google Apple
4) Marketing Name: Symbian Android iOS
As far as I see it in the first layer Symbian is the best options. However in the 2nd layer S60 is the worse option. In layer 3 NOKIA does ok in Europe but is almost unheard of in the USA. And in layer 4 Symbian does not do well either.
Interestingly most Apple users don't even know the name of the technology used. It is just iOS for them. Maybe NOKIA should invent a new cool marketing name.
It's so vivid and lifelike.
I'd go on a Vegan diet but the delivery time from Vega is too long. --brownkitty
Checked on Wikipedia and there only “UI improvements” are mentioned. There was not even a name or version mentioned for the new GUI you spoke of.
This explains why NOKIA has to pay developers. Why else should I develop for a nameless GUI with a use by date of Spring 2011 when the true new Qt GUI will be released for Symbian^4.
Symbian^3 is just a stop gap product, obsolete even before the first device was produced for it.
NOKIA knows all about peeing in your pants to stay warm because that is precisely what they do right now: They pee there pants with Symbian^3 to keep all warm until Symbian^4 and MeeGo is ready for shipment. Only those two have the real improvements. And developers know that. That is why NOKIA needs to “pay” developers to develop for an obsolete before shipment stop gap technology.
The difference is: They have dry pants to change into next year. And next year this time we will know if they had their dry pants ready before their pee has frozen solid.
Actually I have two applications out there. Both are available for Android and Symbian. In one day I sell about as many Android applications then I sell for Symbian in a month.
Which too explain why NOKIA need to bait developers with some price money.
Do I troll sony-ericsson threads? Yes! Why? Because I once owned a P900i and P990in phone. Symbian OS and Sony-Ericsson made. The former absolutely great the later a complete disaster.
No one will hate you more then a disgruntled former fanboy.
And just to clarify: I still like Symbian - I don't like what NOKIA and Sony-Ericsson have made from it. And speaking of it: I don't like the Android phones Sony-Ericsson came up with either. I have a Nexus-One these days.
In the fine print it says:
"Qualifying Apps must be designed, developed, fully compatible with, and published for the Nokia N8"
The N8 is only $600 on eBay! This is a trick.