The smartphone ecosystem today has two dominant
players: Apple’s iOS and Google’s Android operating systems. A late
entrant, Android, has been quick to catch up with iOS and the Open
operating system only seems to be surging ahead.
Given
the success of Android, many other Open Source paradigms are being
floated, most notably the Free and Open Source projects Firefox (of
browser fame) and Ubuntu that are re-making their debut this year in the
commercial smartphone segment. Together, these projects that have been
successful in the technology segments they currently operate in could
perhaps help break into the combined monopoly of Apple and Google in the
smartphone segment.
Canonical’s Ubuntu is trying to
market the idea that smartphones must be as capable as one’s PC and are
trying to port the Ubuntu OS from the desktop with minimum changes so
that it can offer a unified experience across all platforms. Mozilla’s
Firefox OS too targets the low-end phones (in the smartphone segment)
with an all HTML5 approach, implying that every application that would
run on the smartphone will offer a website like experience.
PC out of a smartphone
Ubuntu is among the most
popular Linux-based desktop operating systems today. The backlash Ubuntu
has had to face with its changes in the user interface since its
release in April, 2011, has now evolved into the more stable “Unity”
interface — a futuristic, touch-oriented graphical user interface.
Unity, as the name suggests, was projected as the thread weaving and
unifying all the computing environments — PCs, laptops, tablets, TVs and
smartphones that run on Ubuntu. The smartphone link had been missing,
and now Canonical is all geared up to flex its muscles by porting Ubuntu
on the smartphones.
Mark Shuttleworth, in a virtual
keynote address to the user community, in January 2013, presented
Canonical’s ideas for Ubuntu on smartphones. At the Consumer Electronics
Show 2013, Ubuntu OS was demonstrated on Google Nexus.
Ubuntu’s
Unity interface is what Canonical is betting big on. The Unity
interface, even on desktops yields more space for users with less focus
on permanent navigation or menu options. This again if ported well on
smartphones will be a plus. The navigation on Unity will be the same
across all platforms, unlike Apple’s iOS or Windows OS, which differ on
platforms to match up to the hardware constraints. Mr. Shuttleworth
describes the Unity interface on laptops, TVs and smartphone as
“Individually great in their own right, and coherent as a family”.
Applications
are already in plenty for the desktop platform from the Ubuntu Software
Center, and Ubuntu has invited developers to write apps for the mobile
platform using the Webkit. Canonical has for long had the vision of
getting Ubuntu on the mobile platform, and in small steps they have
inched close, ready to take the dip in the deluge.
Web all the way
The
second most promising entrant in this segment is the Mozilla
Foundation’s latest attempt to build an operating system that’s as free
as the Web. Mozilla believes that Android is not as Open Source an
ecosystem as Google claims and that most design decisions are made by
Google and pushed down to the developers and that often the source code
of the OS is not released after the devices are shipped. Mozilla claims
that Firefox OS will provide an alternative to these “walled gardens”.
Mozilla
Foundation started the operating system in the name of Boot to Gecko,
now more commonly called the Firefox OS. This is an all HTML5,
Javascript and CSS framework, and truly Open Source. Technically, the
biggest challenge for a Web-based operating system is to gain access to
the hardware such as telephony or camera. For, in conventional browsing
environments the Web requests are handled by the native operating system
like iOS, Android or Windows, creating an abstraction between hardware
and the Web framework. Using Javascript and Web Application Programming
Interface (API) Boot to Gecko has already been able to demonstrate most
of the functions by directly accessing system resources.
The
first prototype of this was demonstrated in the Consumer Electronics
Show 2013, on a ZTE-made smartphone. The official statement of Mozilla
is that Firefox OS will be in its final form in a couple weeks, ready to
be ported and released in the market.
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