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Firefox OS vs. Ubuntu OS

Firefox OS reminds me of ChromeOS. both based on a browser and web apps. Ubuntu seems more likely but i'm staying with Android.
 
I'm also leaning towards Ubuntu OS.

Either way I don't see them gaining a huge market share.

Maybe. They're already offering it, and apparently a decent amount of Nexus users have already flashed it onto their phone.

And as far as I can tell Ubuntu has enough vendors that are willing enough to ship phones with Ubuntu OS on it, enough to have Canonical confident.
 
There is also the ZTE Open. Its running Firefox OS. I believe at this time its only available from eBay .

Its an interesting little phone
 
If I read right, the Ubuntu phone was able to dual boot into Android. That's pretty sweet so you get the best of both worlds. I think that Ubuntu would play nicely with Android in most every respect. So that's what counts for me.
 
i just dont see a major market for these 2 late-comers!

Millions of people have waited for an Ubuntu smartphone..

Look at how many people use Ubuntu. And how it'll dual boot. And full desktop integration?

Oh trust me. There will be a good market for it.

Look at how android started off. Back when iphone was really the only thing people would laugh at Android users. Now Android is mopping the floor with Apple.
 
look at WebOS and Windows and Blackberry... all of them had money and a much better start.... but still struggle to get a foot hold.

i dont think these 2.. will ever get more than .. TALK

and if i was going to bet on which might take up enough market share to be the 3rd biggest:
after Google and Iphone..
i would go with Windows.
 
look at WebOS and Windows and Blackberry... all of them had money and a much better start.... but still struggle to get a foot hold.

i dont think these 2.. will ever get more than .. TALK

and if i was going to bet on which might take up enough market share to be the 3rd biggest:
after Google and Iphone..
i would go with Windows.

I gotta disagree with you there. All the money in the world can't make up for the fact Windblows er.. Windows.. Just doesn't make a high quality product like Android or Apple. Sorry but Apple is way better than Windows.

The thing about Windows is the fact they are not keeping up with the times. My uncle has been waiting for a phone that can have desktop capabilites (hint hint! Ubuntu!) that's not including his entire amount of coworkers working in programming.

Think about it this way..
How many people now code on their phone? A whole bunch. Just look at Xda forums.

Now imagine if they could Dev and code it all like a desktop and easily make it portable. With Ubuntu OS they can.

It may not get a huge focus as its own device OS.. At first. Dual booting it on the other hand will cause it to be much more popular.

And no comment on BlackBerry. You should know why they can't get their foot in the door.

I'm not sure what to make of Firefox though..

But yeah don't dismiss Ubuntu just because they have less money. When it comes to tech and being innovative money doesn't mean entirely to much. Make a product that's good and universal, it'll sell.

Oh and just to let you and everyone else know, they already have vendors (major ones apparently) willing to ship their devices with Ubuntu on it.
 
I'm not sure who FX has allied with for search - on the PC, it's Google, and in the Thunderbird Mail app, it's Bing.

Ubuntu has a whole lot of crap from Amazon on the PC.

I'd rather buy the phone, pick my OS and buy that, and keep the rest of the merchants the hell out unless I happen to want the account.
 
i just dont see a major market for these 2 late-comers!
There may not be a big market, but there will be a market for sure.
Millions of people have waited for an Ubuntu smartphone..

Look at how many people use Ubuntu. And how it'll dual boot. And full desktop integration?

Oh trust me. There will be a good market for it.

Look at how android started off. Back when iphone was really the only thing people would laugh at Android users. Now Android is mopping the floor with Apple.
I really like the fact that the phone is a full desktop operating system, and that the phone is really powerful. If you can run desktop software on that phone, then that right there is revolutionary. Someday, there will be no need for desktop computers, or laptops or any of that. But til then, I'll be using Android. But who's to say that Android will not adopt that technology?
 
BlackBerry was a victim of their own arrogance. one of the quotes from the higher ups at Research in Motion was 'no one is going to want a computer for a phone!'. BlackBerry's highest strong point was email. being a business device that is more feature phone than smartphone. the OS is pretty much Java Mobile. BlackBerry might have made sense back in the mid-1990s when email was the only extra folks used on a business-oriented phone.

When society changed and the primary demographic of cellular phones went from the business elite to teens and Tracfone users, BlackBerry refused to sell to them, hoping that their business-oriented target was going to keep them alive.

Then came the iPhone, and the above quote. the only holdouts for BlackBerry were the type who'd never picture themselves with a touchscreen or weild a stylus.

Today BlackBerry is seen as a dinosaur. their app store is bone dry. unlike Microsoft's Windows Phone, they weren't late to the game, they weren't even in the game to begin with! they remained non-progressive and stale. their phones hardly changed much. there were no apps. email was no longer a prime selling point to people looking for a new phone. businesses started dumping BlackBerry for Android and Apple.

Even today, what is left of RIM is still stale. they still have a locked down OS with hardly any apps. Google no longer allows the BlackBerry versions of their apps (gmail, Voice, Maps) to even connect to their servers. in fact, Google has tried hard to pretend BlackBerry doesn't exist. the BB 10 OS is not selling and it has extremely limited app support for Android (the Android Player only supports a mere handful of apps). the Q10 looks like a slightly modified BlackBerry Curve. the aisles are empty. "But they'll die!" "sir, they're dead already!"

But that does not stop the failing system from having fans. even the craptastic Chevy Chevette and Citation have fans and even restorers...there are a few users left who use old Apple Newtons with Cellular air cards. there are folks who still use Windows 3.1 (true story!). some folks refuse to believe in the word 'failure'
 
BlackBerry was a victim of their own arrogance. one of the quotes from the higher ups at Research in Motion was 'no one is going to want a computer for a phone!'. BlackBerry's highest strong point was email. being a business device that is more feature phone than smartphone. the OS is pretty much Java Mobile. BlackBerry might have made sense back in the mid-1990s when email was the only extra folks used on a business-oriented phone.

When society changed and the primary demographic of cellular phones went from the business elite to teens and Tracfone users, BlackBerry refused to sell to them, hoping that their business-oriented target was going to keep them alive.

Then came the iPhone, and the above quote. the only holdouts for BlackBerry were the type who'd never picture themselves with a touchscreen or weild a stylus.

Today BlackBerry is seen as a dinosaur. their app store is bone dry. unlike Microsoft's Windows Phone, they weren't late to the game, they weren't even in the game to begin with! they remained non-progressive and stale. their phones hardly changed much. there were no apps. email was no longer a prime selling point to people looking for a new phone. businesses started dumping BlackBerry for Android and Apple.

Even today, what is left of RIM is still stale. they still have a locked down OS with hardly any apps. Google no longer allows the BlackBerry versions of their apps (gmail, Voice, Maps) to even connect to their servers. in fact, Google has tried hard to pretend BlackBerry doesn't exist. the BB 10 OS is not selling and it has extremely limited app support for Android (the Android Player only supports a mere handful of apps). the Q10 looks like a slightly modified BlackBerry Curve. the aisles are empty. "But they'll die!" "sir, they're dead already!"

The Government is dropping BB also due to its lack of innovation and usefulness. Thats basically an insult. The Government now uses iPhones, Which in my opinion is not as secure. My apple account has been tampered with 3 times in less than 1 year, and in the 5 years of having my Google account, NOTHING has ever made me consider my account security. That is why I trust Google more with security issues than Apple.
 
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