The Register® — Biting the hand that feeds IT

Comments on: Nokia's Trolltech renews Windows mobile vows

Nokia 500 navigator on Windows CE 

Posted Thursday 7th August 2008 05:01 GMT

Not quite accurate. Nokia does use Windows CE 5.0 on it's Nokia 500 Auto Navigation product.

Qt Good 

Posted Thursday 7th August 2008 06:04 GMT

Qt is a good UI toolkit and it does a very good job on a variety of platforms. The signal/slot thing is a pleasure to work with, the Qt class hierarchy is pretty rational.

Nevertheless, and even in the strength of Qt, I'd advise Trolltech to avoid providing garish default icons that Redmond cannot deal with. MS might just buy Nokia in order to retain control of the desktop!

You may as well say 

Posted Thursday 7th August 2008 08:08 GMT

Happy

Nokia does not make any PCs so it makes no sense for Nokia to support Qt on Linux.

firewalls 

Posted Thursday 7th August 2008 12:45 GMT

Linux

Nokia sell Linux based firewalls and I'm sure other Tux stuff

--

Smart people use Linux.

What are you using?

Nokia already shipped or will ship Win Mobile phone 

Posted Thursday 7th August 2008 13:56 GMT

Thumb Down

Nokia is unfortunately forced to ship a Windows Mobile phone since companies running Windows servers and MS Windows corporate users insist on "Windows Mobile" portable devices. This happens even while "Mail for Exchange" is offered free on E Series business smartphones.

Nokia is not Microsoft or Apple. They are out there to make money and they can't ignore that market too. So don't be surprised or call "Symbian" dead if they ship a Windows mobile smart phone.

PC Suite 

Posted Thursday 7th August 2008 15:28 GMT

Nokia PCSuite is a bit of an abomination, but if Nokia is serious about being a service company then it needs something like iTunes running on Windows, mac and linux.

Remember that PCSuite currently does sync, backup, messaging, photo sharing, music upload etc. It represents quite a big investment.

Also, any large software company creates development tools throughout the organisation, so you might have tools running on windows to calibrate phones, get crash dump info from the phones etc, I'm sure Nokia networks have good uses for a windows based toolkit also.

And other thoughts: Maybe the trolltech UI designer tools for mobile need to run on windows also.

Sign up, sign up for The Register's weekly mobile & wireless newsletter - click here

Don’t Miss