A study by mobile security company SMobile Systems claims smartphones running the Symbian operating system are breeding grounds for spyware, viruses, worms and Trojans. SMobile says most users of the infected Symbian smartphones are unaware of the infections.
– Nearly one out of every 63 smartphones
running the Symbian operating system is infected with some form of spyware,
virus, worm or Trojan, as well as hundreds of unlicensed software programs
installed on the handsets, according to a study conducted by SMobile Systems. A
comparison of the statisti…
Posts Tagged ‘Symbian’
Symbian Smartphones: 1 in 63 Infected
Accenture to Buy Nokia`s Symbian Services Unit
Accenture has announced that it has entered into an agreement to acquire the professional services unit of Nokia responsible for Symbian customer engineering and customer support.
– Accenture has announced that it has entered into an agreement to acquire the
professional services unit of Nokia responsible for Symbian customer
engineering and customer support.
Gary Morgenstern, a spokesman for Accenture, said, quot;The strategic intent
of this acquisition is to accelerate …
Symbian Foundation Creates Symbian Horizon to Draw App Developers
The Symbian Foundation, which launched in June, has created Symbian Horizon, an application publishing program to help get more Symbian-based apps to market. A healthier app catalog may help Symbian maintain its OS dominance as the iPhone and Android grow their market share.
– The
newly formed Symbian Foundation has created Symbian Horizon, an
application-publishing program for better distributing applications for the
open-source smartphone platform, which is the most widely used in the world.
“The core idea behind Symbian Horizon is making the business and distribu…
Symbian to develop mobile apps

Symbian, the operating system on nearly half the world’s smartphones, is to become involved in the development of mobile applications, or apps.
Symbian will be a one-stop location for app developers, standardising and testing software and then making it available to existing app storefronts.
Called Horizon, the approach follows the lead set by other operating system makers such as Microsoft and Apple.
The not-for-profit Symbian Foundation will launch the service in October.
The announcement of Horizon follows Apple’s statement on Tuesday that its App Store has seen 1.5 billion app downloads in a year, showing that a significant market exists for a centralised source of application software.
Handset manufacturers, mobile network operators and independent sites have opened their own application stores, but Horizon will aim to provide a centralised, smooth route to market to solidify Symbian’s place in an increasingly crowded operating system market.
Content catalogue
"We have a thriving application developer community right now, with a number of ways to develop them and we have a number of our partners producing stores to get those applications to consumers," said Shaun Puckrin, who heads the Horizon project.
"What this programme is doing is making the combination of developing your application and getting it into the store as easy and with as little hassle as possible," he told BBC News.
"And it’s a service to the stores, which is to say: ‘Hey, we’ve got this great catalogue of content that you should have in your store.’"

The centralisation of application development and distribution could present credible competition to Apple’s iPhone Dev Center and App Store, which until now has set the bar for application variety and sales.
The Symbian Foundation now hopes to raise the profile of the Symbian platform, making its capacity for applications as widely known as that of its competitors.
"What the iPhone has done is woken up the consumer to this kind of content and the ability for applications on phones," said Mr Puckrin. "We’ve always had a lot of innovation and great applications and services on Symbian; all we’re doing is providing an easier channel to get them to a keen consumer base."
New economy
John Delaney, a research director for analysts IDC, sees the move as part of a natural progression the technology community has seen before.
"Handsets are starting to turn into general purpose devices rather than special purpose devices," he told BBC News.
"In many ways it’s analogous to what happened to the PC industry. The hardware has become increasingly generic and the value of the device is in the software. The reverse has been true for most of the mobile phone’s history and that’s likely to change."
As the market focus shifts from hardware functionality to software availability, the new economy of application sales and brand loyalty is still to be worked out.
"What isn’t clear yet is how much people will be willing to pay for those applications and the extent to which being a source of those applications gives you a grip on the customer."</p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.



