R E L A T E D   C O N T E N T
ADVERTISEMENT

Symbian broadens app support

Symbian will help developers port business applications to Symbian-based phone handsets

Daniel Robinson, IT Week 22 Jan 2007
ADVERTISEMENT

Symbian is to add support for Posix libraries to its smartphone platform, a move that will help developers port existing business applications to run on Symbian-based phone handsets, the company said.

Portable operating system interface (Posix) is a set of application programming interfaces (APIs) specified by the IEEE and originally designed for Unix, but now widely supported by other operating systems, such as Windows.

PIPS, which stands for “PIPS is Posix on Symbian OS”, will make it easier to translate desktop projects and middleware to run on Symbian devices. This is expected to broaden the platform’s enterprise application support and attract more developers.

Symbian product manager Erik Jacobson argued that because phones are getting more powerful – similar in capability to desktops of a few years back – now is the right time to try and mobilise applications that might otherwise prove too costly to rebuild from the ground up for Symbian handsets.

The code that may be ported includes database components and web servers, according to Jacobson.

“Apache could probably be ported right now, but we want to make it as frictionless as possible,” he said.

Support will take the shape of an update to Symbian OS 9.1, to be made available to download in mid-February, about the same time as the 3GSM World Congress and Exhibition takes place. The update will be integrated into future handsets from Symbian licensees, with models featuring this support expected before the end of 2007.

PIPS will not make Symbian OS fully Posix-compliant because this would add considerable bloat to the platform, Jacobson said, but the update implements the APIs relevant to mobile applications.

“It’s about reducing the amount of effort [for developers]. If you already have an application, you don’t want to re-write it,” he said. The aim is for code to need little more than a re-compile and a few tweaks to port it to Symbian OS.

See also:

SmartphonesSmartphone software developer continues market dominance  17 Nov 2006
Booming market sustains growth over the first half of 2006 as Nokia takes first place  13 Oct 2006
Review: Palm Treo 750v smartphonePalm wants a piece of the Blackberry pie  10 Oct 2006
Symbian’s share of the smartphone market has led to a 54 percent revenue gain  23 Aug 2006

All Client

Like this story? Spread the news by clicking below:

Post this to Delicious del.icio.us    Post this to Digg Digg this    Post this to reddit reddit!

Permalink for this story

M A R K E T P L A C E
Sponsored links
F E A T U R E D   J O B S
| Aston Carter
Java, J2EE, Developer, Spring, Hibernate, London, city, Graduate. This is an amazing opportunity to join a successful city based team working at the cutting edge of development. My client is looking for strong Java/J2EE developers ... more >
| Aston Carter
E-Commerce, Greenfield, Agile, Java, J2EE, , JavaScript, SQL, London, City Graduate This is an exceptional opportunity for a talented Java, J2EE developer keen to work in a successful development team within arguable the best agile ... more >
| Rullion Computer Personnel Ltd
2nd Line Support Analyst London £35, 000 to £40, 500 My client is a global market leader in the Internet Applications Industry. The company is continually progressing and looking for areas of growth and this ... more >
| Rullion Computer Personnel Ltd
Security Architect / Information Security Specialist – St Albans - Global Leader - Shine At The Highest Level Security Solution Architect / Information Security Architect required by renowned blue-chip organisation offering the finest security projects ... more >
More job opportunities