Firefox OS 1.1 Released, Mozilla Prepares For 2nd Round of Device Launches
SmartAboutThings writes "Mozilla has officially introduced the first update to its mobile Firefox OS. The very first update to Firefox OS adds some important new features, performance improvements and additional language support. Some of the most important changes include MMS support, Push Notifications API, Contact Management enhancements, Firefox browser downloads, Keyboard improvements and much more. In a separate announcement, Mozilla also said that new launches of Firefox OS smartphones will begin soon with more devices and in more markets around the world."
I have a Firefox OS device. It's very cool and it's nice to have alternatives to android and apple.
Not trying to troll or anything, but despite a casual interest in Mozilla and mobile OS's and being an avid desktop FF user I had no clue it was out of beta. No doubt I missed a post or two, but considering I use FF Mozilla's top product and am often sent to their site to report bugs I really think they should fire their marketing people. Breaking into mobile is hard. If a guy who has been using FF since it was still called Phoenix isn't aware you put out a final product I would venture to guess the people who just stopped clicking the big blue E on their desktop are not likely to be coming out in droves. Something has gone seriously wrong at Mozilla over the last few years and this is just another example.
The target audience is people who don't have a smartphone yet, most probably because they can't afford to pay for a $500 phone. Which is most people in the world, so far.
Just works, but cheap?
W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
how the update story is contracted to work and for how long. And is there a contingency for if the manufacturer stops wanting to update the phone?
Get hourly updates featuring
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Available Apps Include
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Fully compatible with
¦Android
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*Unicode support included in a future update
I figured they'd be on version 47 by now.
Firefox OS is nice, but what it really needs is a good web browser.
Probably could include also the people that worries about their own privacy. While is not failsafe, is better than most commonly used alternatives (cyanogenmod+fdroid, ubuntu touch, and maybe tizen could be others)
It sounds like you're asking if its open or closed. its open. Marketing is rather limited in many markets, so it remains to be seen what argument they have for it, other than "firefox! now for your phone".
Well.. maybe. Or Maybe not. But Definitely not sort of.
Low-spec Android phones are available for less than $100 now in the developing world, so again, it's not clear what niche Firefox OS is filling here.
You can even do it live while hosting a podcast
A platform so open you can create apps from inside a webpage using drag'n'drop
Firefox OS's US debut was on the ZTE Open (I think some are still available, $80 USD phone too!). However it's not free software friendly in that last I checked (in the past month) nobody had figured out how to compile the OS from scratch for this phone. Not the ZTE release code nor the Mozilla code. If this is going to be a useful project this stuff needs to work. They should be avoiding phones that have non-free drivers/firmware too. While I understand the OS is 100% free (which is an improvement) the phones aren't and that's a major problem. I'm not suggesting that the modem firmware is released either. However things like wireless drivers and graphics should be released. And ideally they should separate the modem, GPS, gyroscope, memory, and mic from the rest of the phone such that these things can be turned on/off by the user at will and be such that they can't spy on the rest of the phone nor user.
We have a long way to go.
FirefoxOS performs a lot better on devices at that price point than Android does.
Another issue is we have IE 6 back again in style.
Its name this decade is called webkit.. If the web server detects it is a mobile device it outputs Webkit specific (chrome/Safari) CSS that is not W3C compliant.
Complain and the answer is webkit owns 95% of the market so go fsck yourself and buy a droid or iphone like everyone else. Kind of like we do not support Netscape anymore in 2003 even though you used Konsqueror or Firefox .4.
Drives me nuts to see the same developers who praise webkit and use non W3C compliant html5test.com to base their opinions then go out and bash IE 6 and who write code on the mobile end that wont work Windows Phone/Windows 8 either.
http://saveie6.com/
Sorry, But I just brought six Motorola Defys running android to my six sister in laws in Colombia, all running Angry birds and Whats app. They have five megapixel cameras, military spec, and I paid sixty bucks for each one and I just got a call from one sister in law asking me if I could bring ten more down to sell because everyone loves them. You can also get the Nokia Asha, which they love all over South America. My next round of phones to bring down are Samsung Galaxy S2s which I can get for 150 nearly new, show me a Firefox devices that can perform as well as those 2 with an app store.
The Revolution Will Not Be Televised
Do we know if they plan to make this available on tablets? How about running it on Apple hardware? I have an older Samsung Galaxy Tab and iPhone 3GS that would be perfect for trying this out.
That in itself doesn't disprove GP's post, however I have certainly seen the assertion a few times that FFOS outperforms Android on lowend devices yet not really seen any proof to back that up, and certainly not anything to prove that it outperforms it in any significant measurable way. Android seems to perform adequately on lowend devices - as your anecdote suggests - so unless FFOS is significantly faster and more efficient it isn't worth throwing away support for the entire Android app catalog.