At the same time, Google has been making steady gains with its Android operating system, with 160,000 new Android phones activated daily, and various partners plan Android-baesd tablets and other devices.Īndroid and iOS, while geared for mobile devices, stem more from a personal computer lineage compared with Symbian's mobile roots. In contrast, the iPhone 4 appears to be increasing Apple's considerable clout in the mobile market, and application developers' products also run on the iPod Touch and iPad devices that also use the iOS operating system.
The N-series change indicates the company's bets on Symbian-including Nokia's acquisition of full Symbian control from other partners and its subsequent release as open-source software-weren't sufficient to make the operating system a top-end competitor. Years ago, Nokia was the dominant phone maker, but it's struggled to reclaim its past glory. "Going forward, N-series devices will be based on MeeGo," a Nokia spokesman said, though it will continue to offer Symbian lower down the product line. The Nokia N8 will be the last of the flagship N-series smartphones to use Symbian, Nokia told CNET Australia, and confirmed the move in a Reuters interview. Replacing it will be the Linux-based MeeGo software from Nokia and Intel.ĭespite years of investment in its Symbian operating system, Nokia has picked the Linux-based MeeGo instead to go head to head with Apple's iPhone and other higher-end smartphones. Nokia's N8 will be the last of the N-series phones to use the Symbian OS.