ZDNet UK


Skip to Main Content

ZDNet.co.uk - Winner of Best Business Website 2007
  1. Home
  2. News
  3. Blogs
  4. Reviews
  5. Prices
  6. Resources
  7. Community
  8. My ZDNet

 

ZDNet UK RSS Feeds


IT Jobs

Mobile working Toolkit

Nokia's big plans on the Qt

Leader ZDNet.co.uk

Published: 28 Jan 2008 17:25 GMT

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly
  • Post Comment
Nokia's big plans on the Qt

Sometimes, an acquisition fills a gap in a portfolio. Sometimes, it closes down the competition, or snags a useful chunk of market share. Rarely, it changes the game for everyone — but that's what's happening here.

Nokia has seen a future of shrinking margins and saturated markets. It doesn't like that and claims the answer is for it to become an applications company. That would seem to put it in strong competition with its main customers, the network operators. They too need to become applications and service providers, correctly seeing their bread-and-butter carrier revenue disappearing into commodity connectivity.

But Nokia's acquisition of Trolltech's Qt cross-platform technology is a move designed to change the rules the mobile industry has taken for granted. The biggest problem facing mobile applications is a lack of compatibility: they are enormously difficult to create, sell and support across the endlessly multiplying combinations of handsets, operating systems and physical configurations. Through its openness and strong ties to Linux, as well as its single-minded dedication to pragmatism in design, Qt 4 has the best history and best chance of any development platform aimed at creating a truly unified environment across mobile systems and beyond. With Nokia's weight behind it, the odds are even better.

It is significant that Nokia specifically mentioned Windows as an intended target, not to overcome but for adoption. Like a judo player, Nokia is using its opponent's strength against it. Windows Mobile's presence in the market is as part of the closed edifice of Microsoft's OS and applications stack — none of which can migrate out to an open platform. With Qt 4, the open platform, and everything on it, can migrate.

Nokia's bet is that the sheer size of the Qt 4-based market will be a decisive inducement for everyone else, handset makers, operators, and pure applications players alike, and that the explosion in compatibility will amplify the market for everyone much as happened on the desktop when MS-DOS anointed the PC architecture. But unlike then, Qt 4 will break forever the idea that one part of the market can seal itself off as a profitable mini-universe, an idea as archaic in the 21st century as the feudalism it so closely resembles.

Much can go wrong. Write-once, run-anywhere code is easier in PowerPoint than processors. Nokia must balance the needs of its existing developer community and their existing business models with its need to transform. There will be unforeseen interactions with other open-source mobile movements, in which politics will play just as big a part as pragmatic technology. And, of course, Nokia could itself try to form a fiefdom of control and tribute.

The company is too smart for that. It knows the stakes are too high. For the rest of us, there is little as exciting and promising as a world where wireless makes enterprise IT easier, cheaper and better.

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly Print with Dell

Did you find this article useful?
8 out of 8 people found this useful


Full Talkback thread

0 comments

Company/Topic Alerts

Create a new alert from the list below:













Related Jobs

Software Engineer Windows Mobile CE VC++ C#

Huxley Associates has anew requirement for a Software Engineer to start a new 6-month contract in Dorset. You will have solid development skills in ...

Developer Needed to Migrate Classic ASP over to ASP.Net- North London

Migrateing fromClassic ASP to .Net- ASP.NET skills developer needed. North London. My client are looking for a web programmer to develop and ...

C++ Windows Mobile Developer C++ Telecomms

Huxley Associates has a new requirement for a Windows Mobile Developer with strong C++ development experience to start a new 6-month contract in the ...

On The Road Blog

Mobile Security Expert: Your Camera Ph...

Mobile Security Expert: Your Camera Phone Got Hacked Author: Eric Everson, Founder MyMobiSafe.com Have you ever heard someone say “I’d like to be a fly on the wall in that room.”?... More

Post a comment

Eee 1000 + iPhone 3G = the ultimate mo...

Having left the comforting bosom of ZDNet.co.uk to strike out on my own as a freelance journalist recently, I found myself contemplating a shocking truth – I was going to have to shell... More

Post a comment

Think Your Skype Call is Secure? Read...

There is growing, and credible, speculation that Skype has built in a back door to allow monitoring of SKype calls. Heise Online has a good article about it. So, what we have now... More

1 comment