- Dec 11, 2011
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Or "Why can't we put any OS on any handset?"
Seriously, you look at WHY we have different OS's, do we still have those same restrictions? Back even before the days of handset OS's. EVERY manuf did something different. That drove different paths in the OS's. We had fragmentation due to these "evolutionary trees". Does that have to be the case today?
You look at what CPU's, memory, architecture that distinguishes one handset from another, are they all so radically different? From a handset maker, wouldn't you get more market if you could say "You want to run Droid? Sure! You want to run Windows? Sure! You want to run iOS? Sure! You want to run your own version of Linux? Sure" You might have different versions based on the CPU, but over time, maybe the CPU's would standardize into ONE CPU. You might have diff handset makers have diff sensors, but that would come down to just a driver that you need to install.
I know this won't happen even in 5 years, but maybe in 10?
Seriously, you look at WHY we have different OS's, do we still have those same restrictions? Back even before the days of handset OS's. EVERY manuf did something different. That drove different paths in the OS's. We had fragmentation due to these "evolutionary trees". Does that have to be the case today?
You look at what CPU's, memory, architecture that distinguishes one handset from another, are they all so radically different? From a handset maker, wouldn't you get more market if you could say "You want to run Droid? Sure! You want to run Windows? Sure! You want to run iOS? Sure! You want to run your own version of Linux? Sure" You might have different versions based on the CPU, but over time, maybe the CPU's would standardize into ONE CPU. You might have diff handset makers have diff sensors, but that would come down to just a driver that you need to install.
I know this won't happen even in 5 years, but maybe in 10?
