By Deval Shah, Sourav Swain, Richa Nemade, Anshul Mehrotra, Akash Koringa, Vipin Bhosle
By Deval Shah, Sourav Swain, Richa Nemade, Anshul Mehrotra, Akash Koringa, Vipin Bhosle
By Deval Shah, Sourav Swain, Richa Nemade, Anshul Mehrotra, Akash Koringa, Vipin Bhosle
Its sounds strange but the fact is that : More than 90% of the CPUs in the world are not in desktops and
notebooks.
But in embedded systems like cell phones, PDAs ,digital cameras,
camcorders, game machines, iPods, Mp3 Players, TV Sets, GPS Receivers and many more consumer products.
And nearly all of them run a full-blown operating system.
But very Few people are even aware of the existence of these operating
systems.
Handheld devices evolved in the late 1980s as a means to capture the Usefulness of a desktop device in small , mobile package. Handheld devices also grew to embrace communication . In the 1990s, Psion Computers manufactured devices that were PDAs. In 1996, Psion started to design a new 32-bit operating system that supported pointed devices on a touch screen , used multimedia and was more communication rich. The new system was also more object oriented , and was to be portable to different architectures and device designs.
The result of Psion effort was the introduction of the system as EPOC Release I.
EPOC was further developed into two more releases: EPOC Release 3 (ER3) and EPOC Release 5 (ER5).
These ran on new platforms like the Psion Series 5 and Series 7 computers.
Psion also looked to emphasize the ways that its operating system could be adapted to other hardware platforms. Around the year 2000, the most Opportunities for new handheld development were in the mobile phone Business. To take advantage of these opportunities, Psion and the leaders in the mobile phone industry, including Nokia, Ericsson, Motorola, and Panasonic formed a joint venture, called Symbian, which was to take ownership of and further develop the EPOC operating system core. This new core design was now called
Symbian OS.
EPOC (v 5)
OS was renamed to Symbian after that version. - Java, PC Connectivity, IrDA, SMS Symbian OS 6.0, 6.1 - WAP, Java Phone API, Bluetooth & GPRS Symbian OS 7.0 - HW Acceleration , IPv6, Much more improved. Symbian OS 8.0, 8.1 - Audio and video support for recording, security improvements Symbian OS 9.1 - Platform Security (Introduce certificates) Symbian OS 9.2, 9.3 - Nokia E90, Nokia N95, Nokia E51, N96 Symbian OS 9.5 - SQL support is provided by SQLite Latest verson is Symbian OS 10.1 - 24-aug-2011 , In Nokia-N8.
Despite the size of its target computers, Symbian OS had many of the features of its larger siblings.
Processes and Threads :
Symbian OS is a multitasking and multithreaded operating system. Many processes can run concurrently , can communicate with each other, and can utilize multiple threads that run internal to each process.
Common File System support :
Symbian OS organizes access to system storage using a file system model, just like larger Operating systems. It has a default file system compatible with windows (by default it uses FAT-32 file system). It supports other file system implementations through a plug-in style interface. It supports several different file systems , like FAT 16 & FAT 32, NTFS etc.
Networking :
Symbian OS supports TCP/IP networking as well as several other communication interfaces such as serial , infrared and Bluetooth.
Memory Management :
Although Symbian OS does not use (or have the facilities for ) mapped virtual memory , it organizes memory access in pages and allows for the replacement of the pages, that is , bringing pages in, but not swapping them out.
single user devices and require no user authentication to use basic functions.
Symbian OS is very capable yet susceptible to viruses, worms and other
malicious programs.
Versions of Symbian OS prior to version 9 offered a gatekeeper type of
security: The system asked the user for permission to install every installed application. The thinking in this design was that only userinstalled applications could cause system havoc and an informed user would know what programs he intended to install and what programs were malicious. The user was trusted to use them wisely.
This gatekeeper design has a lot of merit.
The problem with this design is that users do not always know the
complete ramifications of the software they are installing. There are viruses that masquerade as useful programs, performing useful functions while silently installing malicious code. Normal users are unable to verify the complete trustworthiness of all the software available.
This verification of trust is what prompted a complete redesign of
takes the responsibility for verifying software away from the user.
Each software developer is now responsible for verifying her own
software through a process called signing and the system verifies the developers claim.
create the Symbian Foundation, with membership open to all organizations. At the same time, Nokia announced its offer to acquire Symbian Limited. Following the close of that acquisition, Nokia will contribute Symbian OS and S60 software to the foundation.
The foundation's platform will build on Symbian OS, today's leading OS
with more than 225 million phones already shipped and with tens of thousands of third-party applications already available for these devices.
The foundation will work to make the platform available in open source
RIM
9,939
- 6.90%
Symbian 12,467
- 8.60%
iOS
33,121
- 22.90%
Android 81,067
- 5 6 . 10 %
Bada
3,842
- 2.70%
Windows Phone
2,713
- 1. 9 0 %
Other 1 243
- 0.90%
Total 1,44,392
- 10 0 %
13,185 12,701 12,652 13,004 14,762 12,508 11,629 10,753 10,508 8,523 7,782 7,534 7,443 5,800 5,594 4,312 4,025
17,458 19,500 23,853 27,599 32,642 29,480 25,387 24,068 23,857 18,315 20,881 17,825 17,949 18,179 18,405 18,400 22,903
35,456 17,295 19,629 16,883 16,011 13,484 8,743 8,360 8,676 7,040 5,325 3,848 4,079 4,720 893 1,726 1,928
75,906 60,490 46,776 36,350 30,801 20,544 10,653 5,227 4,043 1,425 756 575 0 0
1,167 1,018 1,051 1,495 1,488 1,991 2,011 2,403 2,517 2,531 2,398 2,986 3,958 3,763 3,456 4,113 3,536
1,49,042 1,15,185 1,07,740 99,775 1,01,150 81,133 62,058 54,506 53,804 41,093 40,972 36,507 38,143 36,515 32,221 32,408 36,766
versions - Carla and Donna plus further information on the Symbian Belle update rollout. Symbian Carla is intended for smartphones with a 1GHz processor or higher and will be released in late 2012 or early 2013. It is going to offer a new web browser, new widgets, lots of new NFC capabilities and Dolby Surround audio enhancement. The processor minimum requirement means all the Symbian-3. But Symbian Anna handsets like N8, C6-01, C7, E7, E6, X7-00 are not going to get this version