
Following a new round of partnership announcements back in February, LiMo Foundation today added 8 new members, bringing the grand total to 40 -- and perhaps most notably,
Verizon Wireless becomes the first American carrier to team up with the group and the Foundation's final board member (in other words, they seem to be taking this initiative pretty seriously). Other new players include South Korea's SK Telecom, France's SFR, Sagem, chipmaker Infineon, and Mozilla, suggesting that there'll be plenty of mobile Firefox support for LiMo's nascent platform. LiMo represents the largest Linux-based threat to Android's plans for world domination, having
announced its initiative some time before Google while collecting a veritable who's-who of world players from NTT DoCoMo to manufacturers like LG and Motorola -- and with the depth of Verizon's commitment to this, evident by its nabbing of an actual board seat, we wouldn't be surprised to see LiMo-based products actually go beyond its
Any Apps, Any Device initiative and get real on the carrier's official lineup.
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Paul @ May 14th 2008 10:46AM
So no Android handsets but we get Linux instead?
xB Owner @ May 14th 2008 1:22PM
Even if Verizon doesn't have an Android device in their official line up (and I think they will), you'll still be able to have one their network once they initiate "Any App., Any Device."
Omagus @ May 14th 2008 12:32PM
I'm curious how this will affect certain relationships between carriers and manufacturers long term. For example, Verizon is now a board member of the LiMo Foundation. So are Samsung, Motorla and LG. Will those phone manufacturers now try to push better products to Verizon? How does that affect Samsung's long-standing relationship with Sprint? Will Verizon favor products from these manufacturers? How will that affect their business clientèle who favor BlackBerry? What will be the reaction of manufacturers that use Windows Mobile?
Curious and curiouser...