Opening up the source code of Bada OS is not a totally unexpected move from Samsung in light of the recent announcement of Google's plan for the acquisition of Motorola Mobility.
After announcement of the Motorola acquisition, there has been concerns
that Google might inadvertently give preference to Motorola regarding
the Android platform. Having another strong platform on the side makes
for a good contingency plan for the Android phone manufacturers, in case things do not turn out as well as expected because of the Google-Motorola deal.
Samsung Wave 2 which runs Bada OS
Samsung is a very strong hardware
company but software has never been its strong point. They introduced
the Bada OS in 2009 and currently, the OS is used in Samsung's low-end
smartphones. By releasing Bada as open source, Samsung stands to gain a
lot from developers everywhere if they play it right. As Nokia has
demonstrated with Symbian, opening up the source code will not be enough to make Bada a success.
A question that will come up is if there is room for one more mobile phone
OS. Right now Android is the dominant OS followed closely by iOS. RIM's
BlackBerry OS and Microsoft's Windows Phone 7 comes at a distant third
and fourth. Other OSs such as WebOS, MeeGo etc. has been disappointing
so far. Will Samsung be able to make Bada a successful OS by opening it
up to third part developers? We can only wait and watch.
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