pioneer that established the smartphone industry, it was the most popular smartphone OS on a worldwide average until the end of 2010
– at a time when smartphones were in limited use, when
it was overtaken by Android, as Google and its partners achieved wide adoption. It was notably not as popular in North America. The Symbian OS platform is formed of two components one being the microkernel-based operating system with its associated libraries, and the other being the user interface (as middleware), which provides the graphical shell atop the OS The most prominent user interface was the S (formerly Series 60) platform built by Nokia, first released in 2002 and powering most Nokia Symbian devices. UIQ was a competing user interface mostly used by Motorola and Sony Ericsson that
focused on pen-based devices, rather than a traditional keyboard interface from S. Another interface was the MOAP(S) platform from carrier NTT
DoCoMo in the Japanese market Applications of these different interfaces were not compatible with each other, despite each being built atop Symbian OS. Nokia became the largest shareholder of Symbian Ltd. in 2004 and purchased the entire company in 2008.
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The nonprofit Symbian Foundation was then created to make a royalty-free
successor to Symbian OS – seeking to unify the platform, S became the Foundation's favoured interface and UIQ stopped development. The touchscreen-focused Symbian^1 (or S 5th Edition) was created as a result in
2009. Symbian^2 (based on MOAP)
was used by NTT DoCoMo, one of the members of the Foundation, for the Japanese market. Symbian^3 was released in 2010 as the successor to S 5th Edition, by which time it became fully open source. Symbian^3 received the Anna and Belle updates in The Symbian Foundation disintegrated in late 2010 and Nokia took back control of the OS development In February 2011, Nokia, by now the only remaining company still supporting Symbian outside Japan, announced that it would use Microsoft's Windows Phone as its
primary smartphone platform, while Symbian would be gradually wound down Two months later, Nokia moved the OS to closed licensing, only collaborating
with the Japanese OEMs
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and later outsourced Symbian development to Accenture.
[6][19]
Although support was promised until 2016, including two major planned updates, by 2012 Nokia had mostly abandoned development and most Symbian developers had already left Accenture and in January 2014 Nokia stopped accepting new or changed Symbian software from developers The Nokia 808 PureView in 2012 was officially the last Symbian smartphone Document shared on www.docsity.com
Downloaded by kasi-viswanath (professorvichu@gmail.com)
from Nokia NTT DoCoMo continued releasing OPP(S) (Operator Pack Symbian, successor of MOAP)
devices in Japan, which still act as middleware on top of Symbian.
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Phones running this include the FF (ja) from Fujitsu and SH-07F (ja) from Sharp in 2014.
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