I think I'm not the only one how thinks cell phones are going to be
just-phones in the future. The development of applications will
certainly define the phones that we will use in the next years. The
significant increase in smartphone sells, is a hint to see that things
are changing. I don't think Symbian can keep that first place if it
doesn't do something to attract programmers.

On Sep 19, 9:48 pm, Steve Oldmeadow <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Sep 19, 11:00 pm, FMDRA <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > I have heard about Symbian. I have used Symbian myself. Can you
> > elaborate a little more on that?
>
> If I understand your argument you are proposing that ease of
> development equals a larger market share but Symbian has the largest
> market share and is arguably the most difficult to develop for.  To my
> mind there are clearly other factors at work.  If you ask someone why
> they bought a Nokia S60 phone they rarely mention the operating system
> or available applications, if they do they are probably a developer.
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