Telefonica Shows Prototype Firefox OS Phone
judgecorp writes "Telefonica has added some detail to the Firefox OS picture, following the announcement of phones by two manufacturers earlier this week. The Qualcomm-built handset shown by Telefonica in London ran the HTML5 OS and showed multitasking as well as a range of HTML5 applications. Firefox-maker Mozilla receives a lot of funding from Google, but Telefonica sees Firefox OS as a way to achieve independence from Google. It will be more open than Android, and will run on lower-specification hardware, according to the company's director of products."
A common reaction to Firefox OS over the past few days has been to say that it's doomed from the start. But Mozilla's stated goals are to 'promote openness, innovation, and opportunity on the Web for users and developers,' rather than to compete with Android and iOS. What do you think they need to do in order to achieve that in a meaningful way?
I'm not sure it's all so doom and gloom like TFA suggests. Telefonica needs a niche, or a gimmick, and this might be the right choice. At the very least, it might be enough to make a respectable ROI before the curtain closes. And, yes, it's fledgling, and being the first on the bandwagon would work out really well if the bandwagon (metaphorically) becomes a limousine.
I would add: stop the rape and pillage of privacy. I wouldn't mind Upset Birds, rather than the Angry ones that want to know how much sugar is in my coffee, and my longitude while drinking it.
---- Teach Peace. It's Cheaper Than War.
Works perfectly on my Android phone. As a matter of fact, there is a little development environment that caters to just that sort of thing in addition to Python, Perl, PHP, Beanshell, and so on.
The soylentnews experiment has been a dismal failure.
Mozilla is one of the organisation which doesn't try to compete with others, but still strives to improve user experience, to bring innovation even if people care or not. I love Firefox. This new OS is definitely not gonna die like HP or RIM(almost dying) because goals of Mozilla are different from Android, IOS etc.... One more major thing is, it will be completely open unlike androids semi open software. waiting eagerly for their first release in India.
If they can make it usable at a lower cost and still run Angry Birds and Netflix and be halfway decently secure, they should have a winner, as long as they can get the rest of the must have apps people want!
IMHO, Mozilla OS and the phones it is stored on will stand or fall on it's promises of better performance and longer battery on low end phones.
As to the negativity towards the OS. Firstly, about coming to the market too late. If the OS lives up to expectations, there is a niche in the market. It doesn't matter it is in an overcrowded market competing with companies with much larger resources. If they can achieve a low market share, it will be a good thing considering the size of the current market and the growth it will expect in the coming years. As to Goggle dumping Mozilla due to it being a competitor, say Mozilla puts a HTML wrapper around Google Maps, Gmail and it's other services and ships it with phones, then Google wins. The way I see it, Google doesn't make money from Android, they give it away free. They make money from the Services that is used accessed via the OS. Alternatively Mozilla could do the same with MS or another content provider.
Compete with Android and iOS.
Sometimes things that aren't your goal are prerequisite to it.
You can hold down the "B" button for continuous firing.
I was a proud supporter of FireFox on the desktop, promoted it all the time....untill it got so bloated that pc's hard a hard time running it, so i switched to Chrome. I still had it on android, it ran slow, crashed every once in a while but it was still my favorite browser, then i tried opera on android. Haven't looked back. I'm sorry Mozilla but you dropped the ball a long time ago, and in this market if your not bleeding edge, your shark bait, and you are getting swallowed up by all your competitors.
blackberry, i, android, windows, java, and now firefox. all ensuring I loose all my software if I make the wrong choice and wish to move at a later date. All for the low low price of ass raping forced dataplans, and giving all my personal information away to any douche that asks for it.
The Betanews article is wrong in almost every paragraph, so let's just point out the biggest hole in the authors understanding:
Mozilla should stick to where they’re good at, which is the browser market.
Mobile devices are the fastest growing web clients market. There *is no browser market* on iOS, on Windows 8 RT or on Bada. It's not even fully clear yet if there's really a "browser market" on Windows 8.
The only way to get a browser market now is to have an OS out, too. The alternative is to die a slow and certain death. Google search money isn't going to keep coming if there's no devices on which Firefox can even be installed.
There are loads more fundamental misunderstandings in the article, such as the idea that Mozilla will make money on those phones. How can they do that, it's free software... They'll likely just make a deal about who the default search providers are and make money off that. They don't have to care about the margins on the phones at all...
A little boy jumps into a fight between two big bully boys and wants to whip both of them. It's all well defeating a monopoly, but a duopoly? Any case studies in that area?
That phone looks exactly like Android but with a slightly different skin. It even has the same four hardware buttons on the bottom like Android 2.x devices.
http://www.techweekeurope.co.uk/news/telefonica-firefox-os-smartphone-prototype-85340/attachment/photo-06-07-2012-12-11-38
You're right, I wouldn't steal a car. But if it were possible, I sure as hell would download one!
Having used BlackBerry, iOS and Android I have a few real world suggestions.
App Market:
- Don't tie it to any "services".
- OpenID to log in.
- Should not have to log in for free apps.
Search:
- Dont tie to specific search provider. As much as I like Google, I've found myself using DuckDuckGo lately.
General:
- Include native SIP client
- Don't half ass the native Email client. I like how BlackBerry broke each account out into their own icon.
- Live Icons - even just little notification indicators on the icon would be great. Would be excellent if it could indicate now many n
ew E-mails I have.
Brazil has a 200+ million headset market, roughly split equally between 4 major carriers (Vivo, Oi, TIM and Claro). This phone doesn't need to be the iPhone or Android killer - it just needs to be cheap and useful. I
f they're able to get 10% of Vivo's market share, it's a success - I mean, 5 million phones in Brazil alone meanss a lot of phones. I suppose other emerging markets would also have such similar characteristics, so a successful launch here in Brazil would pave the way for rolling this out to other South American countries and then, later, to other Asian emerging markets.
An current-gen iPhone here costs US$1000. If they're able to bring something that has good usability at a local US$200 price-point, they'll sell a lot of headsets, since the Android phones you can get here in Brazil in the US$200 are only fake Chinese crap (lower-end from Samsung start at US$250-300).
Depends on what the applications see. In case of Firefox OS, they'll see the Firefox JS runtime. In GNU/Linux, they see GNU libc.
Considering none of those describe FireFox, no, its not true.
I haven't thought of anything clever to put here, but then again most of you haven't either.
Figure out some way to set us free from U.S. cellphone carriers. That is the only way Firefox OS phone could make a difference.
RIM should abandon QNX, and run either Android, WebOS, or even Firefox OS instead. Maybe Firefox OS is exactly what RIM needs to both go-to-market faster (since QNX still isn't ready, and this arguably is more so) and ingratiate itself with a development community.
that it will not be like ChromeOS.
More than a niche, an ecosystem. The good thing about being browser based is that the very web should give one. Of course, in some way that was the reasoning behind WebOS, or Tizen. Maybe the right factors joins at a good time and it is enough to impose that kind of solutions. http://chiasetructuyen.com/@home/showthread.php?t=50820