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November 03, 2005

Engadget says Nokia’s new N-Series media convergence phones (from the left, the N71, N80, and the N92) are real powerhouses.

And Nokia isn’t kidding around with these 3G Series 60 phones, no sir, they’re busting out the WiFi for the N80 and N92, a 3 megapixel camera in the N80, decent music support in the N71, DVB-H for the N92, and QVGA or greater resolution displays in all three phones. Both the N71 and N80 should be available Q1 2006, with the N92 following in the middle of the year. They’re priced at 400, 500, and 600 Euro (US$490, $610, and $730) respectively, and we’ve got all the juicy specs.

Nokia's mobile video phone, the N92, uses a hinged, 2.8-inch display that lets the device sit on a table like a portable DVD player or twist into an LCD viewfinder like a handheld video camera. Their mobile television system, using DVB-H, is being tested in about 40 pilots worldwide. Nokia expects it to go live in the United States in the first half of 2006.

Nokia also launched today opensource.nokia.com, a new Internet portal for its open source software projects. Nokia believes the projects will enable the company to share mobile software knowledge and innovations with open source developers in order to further drive the mobile industry's development.

Nokia is currently working with the open source community on several projects, such as the open source browser for S60 (Series 60), Maemo, URIQA (URI Query Agent), and Python for S60. Bringing all these projects together, the new portal provides a consolidated view of Nokia's open source activities and access to its open source projects.

The Maemo development platform provides the tools to collaborate with Nokia on future devices and open source releases in the Linux-based Internet Tablet category. Python for S60 allows the developers who utilize the powerful Python programming language.

In addition to its own open source projects, Nokia participates in industry-wide open source projects and communities like the Eclipse Foundation: an open source community whose projects are focused on providing an extensible development platform and application frameworks for building software.

SourceForge.net can also provide a home for open source projects, but information on how best to set up an Eclipse project there is sparse. This article is an introduction to SourceForge for the Eclipse developer.

Google is entering into a $350,000 joint open source technology venture with both Oregon State and Portland State University.

The universities will collaborate to encourage open source software and hardware development, develop academic curricula and provide computing infrastructure to open source projects worldwide.

Oregon is also home to the Open Source Development Labs and Linus Torvalds.

Recently, OSDL launched a Mobile Linux Initiative to tackle technical challenges and support the adoption of Linux on handheld devices.


Originally posted by samc from Daily Wireless, remediated by yatta on Nov 3, 2005 at 08:52 PM