www.WirelessFederation.com/news: A mobile operating system will be launched by Finland’s Nokia Corp. and U.S.-based Intel Corp which can run on a number of electronic devices including smart phones, laptops and TV sets. The announcement was made by Kai Oistamo, head of devices at Nokia Oyj at the Mobile World Congress at Barcelona.

The Linux-based platform, called MeeGo, will be openly available to developers from the second quarter of this year and it will allow for a massive expansion of new applications, provided developers find the platform exciting.

In June 2009, Nokia and Intel announced that they would work together on device and chip architectures, aiming to define a new platform for mobile products beyond existing smartphones and netbook computers.

www.WirelessFederation.com/news: Apple has requested educational software developer Flash of Genius to remove mention of Google’s Android mobile operating system from the iTunes description of the startup’s iPhone and iPod touch application Flash of Genius: SAT Vocab 2.2.

In November 2009, SAT Vocab was announced the Top 10 finalist in its category in the Android Developer’s Challenge, and the company hoped to include that information to boost sales of its iPhone app.

As a result of this, the application submitted by Flash was declared to contain inappropriate or irrelevant platform information by Apple. According to an e-mail sent by the iPhone Developer Program, providing future platform compatibility plans or other general platform references are not relevant in the context of the iPhone App Store and while the application has not been rejected, it would be appropriate to remove ‘Finalist in Google’s Android Developer’s Challenge!

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www.WirelessFederation.com/news: Google’s adoption of Android mobile operating system in China may suffer a setback if the Internet giant decides to pull out of the country. Google pushed itself into the smartphones business with the aim to take the lion’s share of future mobile advertising revenue.

However, its decision to pull out of China would dampen interest in Android and hurt its position in the nascent but rapidly growing market. It is felt that not all the Android devices would be affected by the decision.

It also remains unclear, whether Chinese consumers will be willing to buy a device that lacks critical Google features, even if the other handset makers add other bells and whistles. Besides, the competition has already heightened with the Apple Inc. iPhone now available in the country, and Research in Motion Ltd.’s Blackberry, slated to hit China in the third quarter.

Samsung launches Bada mobile platform

Samsung hopes to extend its app store offering to a wider range of handsets, including less sophisticated feature phones and entry level smartphones.
The Korean technology giant said Bada — which means “ocean” — was a new addition to the company’s mobile ecosystem and would give users a “fun and diverse mobile experience”.
Samsung said it chose the name to “convey the limitless variety of potential applications” that can be created using the new platform, and to demonstrate the company’s commitment to “a variety of open platforms in the mobile industry”.
It also offers mobile operators an easy-to-integrate platform that can be used to provide “unique and differentiated services to their customers”, said Samsung.
“By opening Samsung’s mobile platforms we will be able to provide rich mobile experiences on an increasing number of accessible smartphones,” said Dr Hosoo Lee, an executive vice president at Samsung. “Bada will be Samsung’s landmark, iconic new platform that brings an unprecedented opportunity for operators, developers and Samsung mobile phone users around the world.”
Samsung’s current smartphone range runs the open-source Symbian operating system and the Google-backed Android platform. Carolina Milanesi, a research director at Gartner, said Samsung’s decision to develop and use its own platform for entry-level smartphones was its attempt to “differentiate its products from the competition.”
But Geoff Blaber, an analyst with CCS Insight, questioned Samsung’s thinking: “The big question is, does the mobile phone world need yet another operating system?,” he said.

Samsung hopes to give users a ”fun and diverse mobile experience” on a wider range of handsets, including less sophisticated feature phones and entry level smartphones via its newly created mobile platform dubbed “Bada”. Bada means Ocean in Korean.

Samsung said it chose the name to “convey the limitless variety of potential applications” that can be created using the new platform, and to demonstrate the company’s commitment to “a variety of open platforms in the mobile industry”.

It also offers mobile operators an easy-to-integrate platform that can be used to provide “unique and differentiated services to their customers”, said Samsung.

“By opening Samsung’s mobile platforms we will be able to provide rich mobile experiences on an increasing number of accessible smartphones,” said Dr Hosoo Lee,  executive vice president at Samsung. ”Bada will be Samsung’s landmark, iconic new platform that brings an unprecedented opportunity for operators, developers and Samsung mobile phone users around the world.”

One can’t help but ask – Does the world need another mobile operating system?

Clearwire, the US broadband provider, completes the merger with Sprint Nextel in order to construct a new wireless data network. The new firm will stick to the name Clearwire and will create a WiMAX-based network covering almost 140Mn potential customers. Sprint Nextel’s WiMAX network in the Baltimore region will come under the new merger along with the spectrum of the wireless and broadband operator. After the merger Sprint will hold 51% of the new venture, while Clearwire will take a 22% stake and the remainding stake of the company will be owned by investors which include Comcast, Intel, Time Warner and Google.