RSSMicro.com Search - RSS Feed Search Engine - RSS Feed Directory
Dedicated RSS Feed Search Engine
 Search 4.3 million RSS feeds
The most comprehensive RSS feed search on the web
Top Stories  |  FeedRank Checker

Published

   Last Hour

   Last Day

   Past Week

   Past Month

 Anytime







Featured
RSS Feeds


CNN RSS Feeds

Reuters RSS Feeds

MSNBC RSS Feeds

New York Times RSS Feeds

Washington Post RSS Feeds

CNBC RSS Feeds

ABC News RSS Feeds

Fox News RSS Feeds

Sky News RSS Feeds

Forbes RSS Feeds

CNET RSS Feeds

Unicef RSS Feeds

PBS RSS Feeds

Wall Street Journal RSS Feeds

Financial Times RSS Feeds

Business Week RSS Feeds

Bloomberg RSS Feeds

TheStreet RSS Feeds

ESPN RSS Feeds

   




FeedRank - RSSMicro Search

FeedRank, a newly developed algorithm for ranking RSS feeds only on RSSMicro
Click here to learn more




FeedRank: 4/10  4/10  Good  ---  feeds.moconews.net
mocoNews.net:Unhealthily Obsessed with Mobile Content ...

 

 
Friday, July 25, 2008 --- 116 days ago
Analyst J Gold and Associates has come out with a prediction that Symbian and Android will begin merging into one open source OS within 3-6 months, and it's gotten a fair bit of airplay. The reasons? -- "Google's ( NSDQ: GOOG ) investment in Android is "diluting the potential for it [Google] to build compelling cross-device applications where it can generate substantial revenues". -- Symbian could get some cred with the open source community. -- Fewer platforms for the market, which would benefit everybody. "A combination of the Android and Symbian efforts would be good for the industry, good for Google and good for Symbian," J. Gold said. "It would also help spur a growth in the availability of applications and services. The downside is minimal. Everyone wins," reports Information Week . It's true that Symbian does need to attract unpaid developers to its open source effort, and it's also true that Symbian CEO Nigel Clifford said that the organization would be happy to work with Google "on the application level or…could be on the more fundamental operating system level"—although I thought this would be more about Google's applications and services rather than Android. Against: From a technological point of view there is little to recommend a merger. Symbian and Linux are sufficiently different that there's no real way to easily combine the code—they both use Java in some form but that doesn't amount to much. So any merger would ...




Recent Posts





 Facebook     Del.icio.us     Digg     StumbleUpon     Reddit     Google
Copyright © 2008 RSSMicro.com