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Wikipedia

Symbian

Symbian is a discontinued mobile operating system (OS) and computing platform designed for smartphones.[6] It was originally developed as a proprietary software OS for personal digital assistants in 1998 by the Symbian Ltd. consortium.[7] Symbian OS is a descendant of Psion's EPOC, and was released exclusively on ARM processors, although an unreleased x86 port existed. Symbian was used by many major mobile phone brands, like Samsung, Motorola, Sony Ericsson, and above all by Nokia. It was also prevalent in Japan by brands including Fujitsu, Sharp and Mitsubishi. As a pioneer that established the smartphone industry, it was the most popular smartphone OS on a worldwide average until the end of 2010, at a time when smartphones were in limited use, when it was overtaken by iOS and Android. It was notably less popular in North America.

Symbian
Home screen of Nokia Belle Feature Pack 2 (last version of Symbian)
DeveloperSymbian Ltd. (1998–2008)
Symbian Foundation (2008–11)
Nokia (2010–11)
Accenture on behalf of Nokia (2011–13)[1]
Written inC++[2]
OS familyEPOC (Symbian)
Working stateStill used
Source modelProprietary software,[3] formerly Free software (2010–11)
Initial release5 June 1997; 25 years ago (1997-06-05) (as EPOC32)
Final releaseNokia Belle Feature Pack 2 / 2 October 2012; 10 years ago (2012-10-02)
Marketing targetSmartphones
Available in48 languages
List of languages
Arabic (Arabic, Urdu), Basque, Bulgarian, Catalan, Chinese (Traditional, Simplified), Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, English (UK, US), Estonian, Finnish, French (France, Canada), Galician, German, Greek, Hebrew, Indian (Hindi, Tamil, Marathi), Hungarian, Icelandic, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Kazakh, Latvian, Lithuanian, Malay, Norwegian, Persian, Polish, Portuguese (Portugal, Brazil), Romanian, Russian, Serbian, Slovak, Slovene, Spanish (Spain, Latin America), Swedish, Tagalog, Thai, Turkish, Ukrainian, Vietnamese
Update methodSymbian Signed certificates
Package manager.sis, .sisx, .jad, .jar
PlatformsARM, x86[4]
Kernel typeReal-time microkernel, EKA2
Default
user interface
S60 (from 2009)
LicenseProprietary software,[5] formerly Eclipse Public
Official websitesymbian.nokia.com (defunct as of May 2014), symbian.org (defunct as of 2009–10)
Support status
Unsupported

The Symbian OS platform is formed of two components: one being the microkernel-based operating system with its associated libraries, and the other being the user interface (as middleware), which provides the graphical shell atop the OS.[8] The most prominent user interface was the S60 (formerly Series 60) platform built by Nokia, first released in 2002 and powering most Nokia Symbian devices. UIQ was a competing user interface mostly used by Motorola and Sony Ericsson that focused on pen-based devices, rather than a traditional keyboard interface from S60. Another interface was the MOAP(S) platform from carrier NTT DoCoMo in the Japanese market.[9][10] Applications of these different interfaces were not compatible with each other, despite each being built atop Symbian OS. Nokia became the largest shareholder of Symbian Ltd. in 2004 and purchased the entire company in 2008.[11] The non-profit Symbian Foundation was then created to make a royalty-free successor to Symbian OS. Seeking to unify the platform, S60 became the Foundation's favoured interface and UIQ stopped development. The touchscreen-focused Symbian^1 (or S60 5th Edition) was created as a result in 2009. Symbian^2 (based on MOAP) was used by NTT DoCoMo, one of the members of the Foundation, for the Japanese market. Symbian^3 was released in 2010 as the successor to S60 5th Edition, by which time it became fully free software. The transition from a proprietary operating system to a free software project is believed to be one of the largest in history.[12] Symbian^3 received the Anna and Belle updates in 2011.[13][14]

The Symbian Foundation disintegrated in late 2010 and Nokia took back control of the OS development.[15][16] In February 2011, Nokia, by now the only remaining company still supporting Symbian outside Japan, announced that it would use Microsoft's Windows Phone 7 as its primary smartphone platform, while Symbian would be gradually wound down.[17][18] Two months later, Nokia moved the OS to proprietary licensing, only collaborating with the Japanese OEMs[19] and later outsourced Symbian development to Accenture.[6][20] Although support was promised until 2016, including two major planned updates, by 2012 Nokia had mostly abandoned development and most Symbian developers had already left Accenture,[21] and in January 2014 Nokia stopped accepting new or changed Symbian software from developers.[22] The Nokia 808 PureView in 2012 was officially the last Symbian smartphone from Nokia.[23] NTT DoCoMo continued releasing OPP(S) (Operator Pack Symbian, successor of MOAP) devices in Japan, which still act as middleware on top of Symbian.[24] Phones running this include the F-07F [ja] from Fujitsu and SH-07F [ja] from Sharp in 2014.

History

 
Logo of Symbian OS until the Symbian Foundation was formed in 2008

Symbian originated from EPOC32, an operating system created by Psion in the 1990s. In June 1998, Psion Software became Symbian Ltd., a major joint venture between Psion and phone manufacturers Ericsson, Motorola, and Nokia.

Afterwards, different software platforms were created for Symbian, backed by different groups of mobile phone manufacturers. They include S60 (Nokia, Samsung and LG), UIQ (Sony Ericsson and Motorola) and MOAP(S) (Japanese only such as Fujitsu, Sharp etc.).

With no major competition in the smartphone OS then (Palm OS and Windows Mobile were comparatively small players), Symbian reached as high as 67% of the global smartphone market share in 2006.[25]

Despite its sizable market share then, Symbian was at various stages difficult to develop for: First (at around early-to-mid-2000s) due to the complexity of then the only native programming languages Open Programming Language (OPL) and Symbian C++, and of the OS; then the stubborn developer bureaucracy, along with high prices of various integrated development environments (IDEs) and software development kits (SDKs), which were prohibitive for independent or very small developers; and then the subsequent fragmentation, which was in part caused by infighting among and within manufacturers, each of which also had their own IDEs and SDKs. All of this discouraged third-party developers, and served to cause the native app ecosystem for Symbian not to evolve to a scale later reached by Apple's App Store or Android's Google Play.

By contrast, iPhone OS (renamed iOS in 2010) and Android had comparatively simpler design, provided easier and much more centralized infrastructure to create and obtain third-party apps, offered certain developer tools and programming languages with a manageable level of complexity, and having abilities such as multitasking and graphics to meet future consumer demands.

Although Symbian was difficult to program for, this issue could be worked around by creating Java Mobile Edition apps, ostensibly under a "write once, run anywhere" slogan.[26] This wasn't always the case because of fragmentation due to different device screen sizes and differences in levels of Java ME support on various devices.

In June 2008, Nokia announced the acquisition of Symbian Ltd., and a new independent non-profit organization called the Symbian Foundation was established. Symbian OS and its associated user interfaces S60, UIQ, and MOAP(S) were contributed by their owners Nokia, NTT DoCoMo, Sony Ericsson, and Symbian Ltd., to the foundation with the objective of creating the Symbian platform as a royalty-free, Free software, under the Free Software Foundation (FSF) and Open Source Initiative (OSI) approved Eclipse Public License (EPL). The platform was designated as the successor to Symbian OS, following the official launch of the Symbian Foundation in April 2009. The Symbian platform was officially made available as Free software in February 2010.[27]

Nokia became the major contributor to Symbian's code, since it then possessed the development resources for both the Symbian OS core and the user interface. Since then Nokia maintained its own code repository for the platform development, regularly releasing its development to the public repository.[28] Symbian was intended to be developed by a community led by the Symbian Foundation, which was first announced in June 2008 and which officially launched in April 2009. Its objective was to publish the source code for the entire Symbian platform under the OSI and FSF approved EPL). The code was published under EPL on 4 February 2010; Symbian Foundation reported this event to be the largest codebase moved to Free software in history.[27][29]

However, some important components within Symbian OS were licensed from third parties, which prevented the foundation from publishing the full source under EPL immediately; instead much of the source was published under a more restrictive Symbian Foundation License (SFL) and access to the full source code was limited to member companies only, although membership was open to any organisation.[30] Also, the Free software Qt framework was introduced to Symbian in 2010, as the primary upgrade path to MeeGo, which was to be the next mobile operating system to replace and supplant Symbian on high-end devices; Qt was by its nature free and very convenient to develop with. Several other frameworks were deployed to the platform, among them Standard C and C++, Python, Ruby, and Adobe Flash Lite. IDEs and SDKs were developed and then released for free, and application software (app) development for Symbian picked up.

In November 2010, the Symbian Foundation announced that due to changes in global economic and market conditions (and also a lack of support from members such as Samsung[31] and Sony Ericsson), it would transition to a licensing-only organisation;[30] Nokia announced it would take over the stewardship of the Symbian platform. Symbian Foundation would remain the trademark holder and licensing entity and would only have non-executive directors involved.

With market share sliding from 39% in Q32010 to 31% in Q42010,[32] Symbian was losing ground to iOS and Android quickly, eventually falling behind Android in Q42010.[33] Stephen Elop was appointed the CEO of Nokia in September 2010, and on 11 February 2011, he announced a partnership with Microsoft that would see Nokia adopt Windows Phone as its primary smartphone platform,[34] and Symbian would be gradually phased out, together with MeeGo.[18] As a consequence, Symbian's market share fell, and application developers for Symbian dropped out rapidly. Research in June 2011 indicated that over 39% of mobile developers using Symbian at the time of publication were planning to abandon the platform.[35]

By 5 April 2011, Nokia ceased to make free any portion of the Symbian software and reduced its collaboration to a small group of preselected partners in Japan.[5] Source code released under the original EPL remains available in third party repositories,[36] including a full set of all public code from the project as of 7 December 2010.[37]

On 22 June 2011, Nokia made an agreement with Accenture for an outsourcing program. Accenture will provide Symbian-based software development and support services to Nokia through 2016.[20] The transfer of Nokia employees to Accenture was completed on 30 September 2011 and 2,800 Nokia employees became Accenture employees as of October 2011.[6]

Nokia terminated its support of software development and maintenance for Symbian with effect from 1 January 2014, thereafter refusing to publish new or changed Symbian applications or content in the Nokia Store and terminating its 'Symbian Signed' program for software certification.[38]

Features

User interface

Symbian has had a native graphics toolkit since its inception, known as AVKON (formerly known as Series 60). S60 was designed to be manipulated by a keyboard-like interface metaphor, such as the ~15-key augmented telephone keypad, or the mini-QWERTY keyboards. AVKON-based software is binary-compatible with Symbian versions up to and including Symbian^3.

Symbian^3 includes the Qt framework, which is now the recommended user interface toolkit for new applications. Qt can also be installed on older Symbian devices.

Symbian^4 was planned to introduce a new GUI library framework specifically designed for a touch-based interface, known as "UI Extensions for Mobile" or UIEMO (internal project name "Orbit"), which was built on top of Qt Widget; a preview was released in January 2010, however in October 2010 Nokia announced that Orbit/UIEMO had been cancelled.

Nokia later recommended that developers use Qt Quick with QML, the new high-level declarative UI and scripting framework for creating visually rich touchscreen interfaces that allowed development for both Symbian and MeeGo; it would be delivered to existing Symbian^3 devices as a Qt update. When more applications gradually feature a user interface reworked in Qt, the legacy S60 framework (AVKON) would be deprecated and no longer included with new devices at some point, thus breaking binary compatibility with older S60 applications.[39][40]

Browser

 
Symbian S60 5th edition on a Samsung Omnia HD

Symbian^3 and earlier have a built-in WebKit based browser. Symbian was the first mobile platform to make use of WebKit (in June 2005).[41] Some older Symbian models have Opera Mobile as their default browser.

Nokia released a new browser with the release of Symbian Anna with improved speed and an improved user interface.[42]

Multiple language support

Symbian had strong localization support enabling manufacturers and 3rd party application developers to localize Symbian based products to support global distribution. Nokia made languages available in the device, in language packs: a set of languages which cover those commonly spoken in the area where a device variant is to be sold. All language packs have in common English, or a locally relevant dialect of it. The last release, Symbian Belle, supports these 48 languages, with [dialects], and (scripts):

  • Arabic (Arabic)
  • Basque (Latin)
  • Bulgarian (Cyrillic)
  • Catalan (Latin)
  • Chinese [PRC] (Simplified Chinese)
  • Chinese [Hong Kong] (Traditional Chinese)
  • Chinese [Taiwan] (Traditional Chinese)
  • Croatian (Latin)
  • Czech (Latin)
  • Danish (Latin)
  • Dutch (Latin)
  • English [UK] (Latin)
  • English [US] (Latin)
  • Estonian (Latin)
  • Finnish (Latin)
  • French (Latin)
  • French [Canadian] (Latin)
  • Galician (Latin)
  • German (Latin)
  • Greek (Greek)
  • Hebrew (Hebrew)
  • Hindi (Indian)
  • Hungarian (Latin)
  • Icelandic (Latin)
  • Indonesian [Bahasa Indonesia] (Latin)
  • Italian (Latin)
  • Japanese (Japanese script)*
  • Kazakh (Cyrillic)
  • Latvian (Latin)
  • Lithuanian (Latin)
  • Malay [Bahasa Malaysia] (Latin)
  • Marathi (India: Maharashtra)
  • Norwegian (Latin)
  • Persian [Farsi]
  • Polish (Latin)
  • Portuguese (Latin)
  • Portuguese [Brazilian] (Latin)
  • Romanian [Romania] (Latin)
  • Russian (Cyrillic)
  • Serbian (Latin)
  • Slovak (Latin)
  • Slovene (Latin)
  • Spanish (Latin)
  • Spanish [Latin America] (Latin)
  • Swedish (Latin)
  • Tagalog [Filipino] (Latin)
  • Thai (Thai)
  • Tamil (India)
  • Turkish (Latin)
  • Ukrainian (Cyrillic)
  • Urdu (Arabic)
  • Vietnamese (Latin)

Symbian Belle marks the introduction of Kazakh, while Korean is no longer supported.

  • Japanese is only available on Symbian^2 devices as they are made in Japan, and on other Symbian devices Japanese is still supported with limitations.

Application development

From 2010, Symbian switched to using standard C++ with Qt as the main SDK, which can be used with either Qt Creator or Carbide.c++. Qt supports the older Symbian/S60 3rd (starting with Feature Pack 1, a.k.a. S60 3.1) and Symbian/S60 5th Edition (a.k.a. S60 5.01b) releases, as well as the new Symbian platform. It also supports Maemo and MeeGo, Windows, Linux and Mac OS X.[43][44]

Alternative application development can be done using Python (see Python for S60), Adobe Flash Lite or Java ME.

Symbian OS previously used a Symbian specific C++ version, along with CodeWarrior and later Carbide.c++ integrated development environment (IDE), as the native application development environment.

Web Run time (WRT) is a portable application framework that allows creating widgets on the S60 Platform; it is an extension to the S60 WebKit based browser that allows launching multiple browser instances as separate JavaScript applications.[45][46]

Application development

Qt

As of 2010, the SDK for Symbian is standard C++, using Qt. It can be used with either Qt Creator, or Carbide (the older IDE previously used for Symbian development).[43][47] A phone simulator allows testing of Qt apps. Apps compiled for the simulator are compiled to native code for the development platform, rather than having to be emulated.[48] Application development can either use C++ or QML.

Symbian C++

As Symbian OS is written in C++ using Symbian Software's coding standards, it is possible to develop using Symbian C++, although it is not a standard implementation. Before the release of the Qt SDK, this was the standard development environment. There were multiple platforms based on Symbian OS that provided software development kits (SDKs) for application developers wishing to target Symbian OS devices, the main ones being UIQ and S60. Individual phone products, or families, often had SDKs or SDK extensions downloadable from the maker's website too.

The SDKs contain documentation, the header files and library files needed to build Symbian OS software, and a Windows-based emulator ("WINS"). Up until Symbian OS version 8, the SDKs also included a version of the GNU Compiler Collection (GCC) compiler (a cross-compiler) needed to build software to work on the device.

Symbian OS 9 and the Symbian platform use a new application binary interface (ABI) and needed a different compiler. A choice of compilers is available including a newer version of GCC (see external links below).

Unfortunately, Symbian C++ programming has a steep learning curve, as Symbian C++ requires the use of special techniques such as descriptors, active objects and the cleanup stack. This can make even relatively simple programs initially harder to implement than in other environments. It is possible that the techniques, developed for the much more restricted mobile hardware and compilers of the 1990s, caused extra complexity in source code because programmers are required to concentrate on low-level details instead of more application-specific features. As of 2010, these issues are no longer the case when using standard C++, with the Qt SDK.

Symbian C++ programming is commonly done with an integrated development environment (IDE). For earlier versions of Symbian OS, the commercial IDE CodeWarrior for Symbian OS was favoured. The CodeWarrior tools were replaced during 2006 by Carbide.c++, an Eclipse-based IDE developed by Nokia. Carbide.c++ is offered in four different versions: Express, Developer, Professional, and OEM, with increasing levels of capability. Fully featured software can be created and released with the Express edition, which is free. Features such as UI design, crash debugging etc. are available in the other, charged-for, editions. Microsoft Visual Studio 2003 and 2005 are also supported via the Carbide.vs plugin.

Other languages

 
Symbian v9.1 with a S60v3 interface, on a Nokia E61

Symbian devices can also be programmed using Python, Java ME, Flash Lite, Ruby, .NET, Web Runtime (WRT) Widgets and Standard C/C++.[49]

Visual Basic programmers can use NS Basic to develop apps for S60 3rd Edition and UIQ 3 devices.

In the past, Visual Basic, Visual Basic .NET, and C# development for Symbian were possible through AppForge Crossfire, a plug-in for Microsoft Visual Studio. On 13 March 2007 AppForge ceased operations; Oracle purchased the intellectual property, but announced that they did not plan to sell or provide support for former AppForge products. Net60, a .NET compact framework for Symbian, which is developed by redFIVElabs, is sold as a commercial product. With Net60, VB.NET, and C# (and other) source code is compiled into an intermediate language (IL) which is executed within the Symbian OS using a just-in-time compiler. (As of 18 January 2010, RedFiveLabs has ceased development of Net60 with this announcement on their landing page: "At this stage we are pursuing some options to sell the IP so that Net60 may continue to have a future.")

There is also a version of a Borland IDE for Symbian OS. Symbian development is also possible on Linux and macOS using tools and methods developed by the community, partly enabled by Symbian releasing the source code for key tools. A plug-in that allows development of Symbian OS applications in Apple's Xcode IDE for Mac OS X was available.[50]

Java ME applications for Symbian OS are developed using standard techniques and tools such as the Sun Java Wireless Toolkit (formerly the J2ME Wireless Toolkit). They are packaged as JAR (and possibly JAD) files. Both CLDC and CDC applications can be created with NetBeans. Other tools include SuperWaba, which can be used to build Symbian 7.0 and 7.0s programs using Java.

Nokia S60 phones can also run Python scripts when the interpreter Python for S60 is installed, with a custom made API that allows for Bluetooth support and such. There is also an interactive console to allow the user to write Python scripts directly from the phone.

Deployment

Once developed, Symbian applications need to find a route to customers' mobile phones. They are packaged in SIS files which may be installed over-the-air, via PC connect, Bluetooth or on a memory card. An alternative is to partner with a phone manufacturer and have the software included on the phone itself. Applications must be Symbian Signed for Symbian OS 9.x to make use of certain capabilities (system capabilities, restricted capabilities and device manufacturer capabilities).[51] Applications could be signed for free in 2010.[52]

Architecture

Technology domains and packages

Symbian's design is subdivided into technology domains,[53] each of which comprises a set of software packages.[54] Each technology domain has its own roadmap, and the Symbian Foundation has a team of technology managers who manage these technology domain roadmaps.

Every package is allocated to exactly one technology domain, based on the general functional area to which the package contributes and by which it may be influenced. By grouping related packages by themes, the Symbian Foundation hopes to encourage a strong community to form around them and to generate discussion and review.

The Symbian System Model[55] illustrates the scope of each of the technology domains across the platform packages.

Packages are owned and maintained by a package owner, a named individual from an organization member of the Symbian Foundation, who accepts code contributions from the wider Symbian community and is responsible for package.

Symbian kernel

The Symbian kernel (EKA2) supports sufficiently fast real-time response to build a single-core phone around it – that is, a phone in which a single processor core executes both the user applications and the signalling stack.[56] The real-time kernel has a microkernel architecture containing only the minimum, most basic primitives and functionality, for maximum robustness, availability and responsiveness. It has been termed a nanokernel, because it needs an extended kernel to implement any other abstractions. It contains a scheduler, memory management and device drivers, with networking, telephony, and file system support services in the OS Services Layer or the Base Services Layer. The inclusion of device drivers means the kernel is not a true microkernel.

Design

Symbian features pre-emptive multitasking and memory protection, like other operating systems (especially those created for use on desktop computers). EPOC's approach to multitasking was inspired by VMS and is based on asynchronous server-based events.

Symbian OS was created with three systems design principles in mind:

  1. the integrity and security of user data is paramount
  2. user time must not be wasted
  3. all resources are scarce

To best follow these principles, Symbian uses a microkernel, has a request-and-callback approach to services, and maintains separation between user interface and engine. The OS is optimised for low-power battery-based devices and for read-only memory (ROM)-based systems (e.g. features like XIP and re-entrancy in shared libraries). The OS, and application software, follows an object-oriented programming design named model–view–controller (MVC).

Later OS iterations diluted this approach in response to market demands, notably with the introduction of a real-time kernel and a platform security model in versions 8 and 9.

There is a strong emphasis on conserving resources which is exemplified by Symbian-specific programming idioms like descriptors and a cleanup stack. Similar methods exist to conserve storage space. Further, all Symbian programming is event-based, and the central processing unit (CPU) is switched into a low power mode when applications are not directly dealing with an event. This is done via a programming idiom called active objects. Similarly the Symbian approach to threads and processes is driven by reducing overheads.

Operating system

The All over Model contains the following layers, from top to bottom:

  • UI Framework Layer
  • Application Services Layer
  • OS Services Layer
    • generic OS services
    • communications services
    • multimedia and graphics services
    • connectivity services
  • Base Services Layer
  • Kernel Services & Hardware Interface Layer

The Base Services Layer is the lowest level reachable by user-side operations; it includes the File Server and User Library, a Plug-In Framework which manages all plug-ins, Store, Central Repository, DBMS and cryptographic services. It also includes the Text Window Server and the Text Shell: the two basic services from which a completely functional port can be created without the need for any higher layer services.

Symbian has a microkernel architecture, which means that the minimum necessary is within the kernel to maximise robustness, availability and responsiveness. It contains a scheduler, memory management and device drivers, but other services like networking, telephony and file system support are placed in the OS Services Layer or the Base Services Layer. The inclusion of device drivers means the kernel is not a true microkernel. The EKA2 real-time kernel, which has been termed a nanokernel, contains only the most basic primitives and requires an extended kernel to implement any other abstractions.

Symbian is designed to emphasise compatibility with other devices, especially removable media file systems. Early development of EPOC led to adopting File Allocation Table (FAT) as the internal file system, and this remains, but an object-oriented persistence model was placed over the underlying FAT to provide a POSIX-style interface and a streaming model. The internal data formats rely on using the same APIs that create the data to run all file manipulations. This has resulted in data-dependence and associated difficulties with changes and data migration.

There is a large networking and communication subsystem, which has three main servers called: ETEL (EPOC telephony), ESOCK (EPOC sockets) and C32 (responsible for serial communication). Each of these has a plug-in scheme. For example, ESOCK allows different ".PRT" protocol modules to implement various networking protocol schemes. The subsystem also contains code that supports short-range communication links, such as Bluetooth, IrDA and USB.

There is also a large volume of user interface (UI) Code. Only the base classes and substructure were contained in Symbian OS, while most of the actual user interfaces were maintained by third parties. This is no longer the case. The three major UIs – S60, UIQ and MOAP – were contributed to Symbian in 2009. Symbian also contains graphics, text layout and font rendering libraries.

All native Symbian C++ applications are built up from three framework classes defined by the application architecture: an application class, a document class and an application user interface class. These classes create the fundamental application behaviour. The remaining needed functions, the application view, data model and data interface, are created independently and interact solely through their APIs with the other classes.

Many other things do not yet fit into this model – for example, SyncML, Java ME providing another set of APIs on top of most of the OS and multimedia. Many of these are frameworks, and vendors are expected to supply plug-ins to these frameworks from third parties (for example, Helix Player for multimedia codecs). This has the advantage that the APIs to such areas of functionality are the same on many phone models, and that vendors get a lot of flexibility. But it means that phone vendors needed to do a great deal of integration work to make a Symbian OS phone.

Symbian includes a reference user-interface called "TechView." It provides a basis for starting customisation and is the environment in which much Symbian test and example code runs. It is very similar to the user interface from the Psion Series 5 personal organiser and is not used for any production phone user interface.

Symbian UI variants, platforms

Symbian, as it advanced to OS version 7.0, spun off into several different graphical user interfaces, each backed by a certain company or group of companies. Unlike Android OS's cosmetic GUIs, Symbian GUIs are referred to as "platforms" due to more significant modifications and integrations. Things became more complicated when applications developed for different Symbian GUI platforms were not compatible with each other, and this led to OS fragmentation.[57]

User Interfaces platforms that run on or are based on Symbian OS include:

  • S60, Symbian, also called Series 60. It was backed mainly by Nokia. There are several editions of this platform, appearing first as S60 (1st Edition) on Nokia 7650. It was followed by S60 2nd Edition (e.g. Nokia N70), S60 3rd Edition (e.g. Nokia N73) and S60 5th Edition (which introduced touch UI e.g. Nokia N97). The name, S60, was changed to just Symbian after the formation of Symbian Foundation, and subsequently called Symbian^1, 2 and 3.
  • Series 80 used by Nokia Communicators such as Nokia 9300i.
  • Series 90 Touch and button based. The only phone using this platform is Nokia 7710.
  • UIQ backed mainly by Sony Ericsson and then Motorola. It is compatible with both buttons and touch/stylus based inputs. The last major release version is UIQ3.1 in 2008, on Sony Ericsson G900. It was discontinued after the formation of Symbian Foundation, and the decision to consolidate different Symbian UI variants into one led to the adoption of S60 as the version going forward.[58]
  • MOAP (Mobile Oriented Applications Platform) [Japan Only] used by Fujitsu, Mitsubishi, Sony Ericsson and Sharp-developed phones for NTT DoCoMo. It uses an interface developed specifically for DoCoMo's FOMA "Freedom of Mobile Access" network brand and is based on the UI from earlier Fujitsu FOMA models. The user cannot install new C++ applications. (Japan Only)
  • OPP [Japan Only], successor of MOAP, used on NTT DoCoMo's FOMA phone.

Version comparison

Feature Symbian^3/Anna/Belle Symbian^2[59] Symbian^1/Series 60 5th Edition Series 60 3rd Edition UIQ (2.0) Series 80
Year released 2010 (Symbian^3), 2011 (Symbian Anna, Nokia Belle) 2010 (Japan only with MOAP/OPP middleware) 2008 2006 2002 2001
Company Symbian Foundation, later Nokia Symbian Foundation Symbian Foundation Nokia UIQ Technology Nokia
Symbian OS version 9.5 (Symbian^3/Symbian Anna), 10.1 (Nokia Belle) ? 9.4 9.3
Series 60 version 5.2 (Symbian^3/Symbian Anna),[60] 5.3 (Nokia Belle), 5.4 (Nokia Belle FP1) 5.1 5th Edition 3rd Edition Feature Pack 2 N/A N/A
Touch input support Yes Yes Yes No Yes No
Multi touch input support Yes No No No No
Number of customizable home screens Three to six (Five on Nokia E6 and Nokia 500, six on Nokia Belle) One Two One
Wi-Fi version support B, G, N B, G B, G B, G B, G
USB on the go support Yes No No
DVB-H support Yes, with extra headset[61] Un­known, but have 1seg support[62] Yes, with extra headset Yes, with extra headset
Short range FM transmitter support Yes Yes Yes No No
FM radio support Yes ? Yes Yes Yes No
External Storage Card Support MicroSD, up to 32GB MicroSD MicroSD MicroSD, MiniSD Memory Stick, MicroSD, MultiMedia Card MultiMedia Card
Adobe Flash support Yes, Flash Lite native version 4.0, upgradable Yes, Flash Lite native version 3.1, upgradable Yes, Flash Lite native version 3.1, upgradable Yes, Flash native version 6, not upgradable
Microsoft Silverlight support No[63][citation needed] Yes[64][65] No[66][citation needed] No
OpenGL ES support Yes, version 2.0 No
SQLite support Yes Yes Yes[67]
CPU architecture support ARM SH-Mobile ARM ARM ARM
Programmed in C++, Qt ? C++, Qt C++, Qt
License Eclipse Public License;
Since 31 March 2011: Nokia Symbian License 1.0
proprietary SFL license, while some portions of source code are EPL licensed.
Public issues list No more
Package manager .sis, .sisx ? .sis, .sisx .sis, .sisx .sis, .sisx .sis, .sisx
Non English languages support Yes mainly Japanese Yes Yes Yes Yes
Underlining spell checker Yes Yes[68] Yes Yes
Keeps state on shutdown or crash No No No No
Internal search Yes Yes[62] Yes Yes Yes Yes
Proxy server Yes ? Yes Yes Yes Yes
On-device encryption Yes Yes[62] Yes Yes
Cut, copy, and paste support Yes Yes[68] Yes Yes Yes Yes
Undo No No Yes Yes Yes
Default Web Browser for S60, WebKit engine version 7.2, engine version 525 (Symbian^3);[69] version 7.3, engine version 533.4 (Symbian Anna) version 7.1.4, engine version 525; version 7.3, engine version 533.4 (for 9 selected units after firmware updates released in summer 2011) engine version 413 (Nokia N79) N/A N/A
Official App Store Nokia Ovi Store i-αppli/i-Widget[68] Nokia Ovi Store, Sony Ericsson PlayNow Arena Nokia Ovi Store, Download!
Email sync protocol support POP3, IMAP i-mode mail[68] POP3, IMAP POP3, IMAP POP3, IMAP POP3, IMAP
NFC Support Yes No No No No No
Push alerts Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
Voice recognition Yes Yes Yes Yes
Tethering USB, Bluetooth; mobile Wi-Fi hotspot, with third-party software USB, Bluetooth; mobile Wi-Fi hotspot, with third-party software USB, Bluetooth; mobile Wi-Fi hotspot, with third-party software USB, Bluetooth;
Text, document support Mobile Office Applications, PDF Mobile Office Applications, PDF Mobile Office Applications, PDF Mobile Office Applications, PDF Mobile Office Applications, PDF Mobile Office Applications, PDF
Audio playback All wma,[62] aac[citation needed] All All wav, mp3
Video playback H.263, H.264, WMV, MPEG4, MPEG4@ HD 720p 25–30 frames/s, MKV, DivX, XviD WMV,[68] MPEG4[citation needed] H.263, WMV, MPEG4, 3GPP, 3GPP2 H.263, WMV, MPEG4, 3GPP, 3GPP2 H.263, 3GPP, 3GPP2
Turn-by-turn GPS Yes, with third-party software, or Nokia Maps Yes, with monthly paid Docomo Map Navi[70] (ドコモ地図ナビ[71]) Yes, with third-party software, or Nokia Maps Yes, with third-party software, or Nokia Maps Yes, with third-party software
Video out Nokia AV (3.5mm), PAL, NTSC, HDMI, DLNA via Nokia Play To HDMI, and Nokia AV (3.5mm), PAL, NTSC Nokia AV (3.5mm), PAL, NTSC No
Multitasking Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
Desktop interactive widgets Yes Yes Yes No
Integrated hardware keyboard Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
Bluetooth keyboard Yes Yes[62] Yes Yes Yes
Video conference front video camera Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
Can share data via Bluetooth with all devices Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
Skype, third-party software Yes[72] Yes[72] Yes[72]
Facebook IM chat Yes ? Yes Yes
Secure Shell (SSH) Yes, third-party software Yes, third-party software Yes, third-party software
OpenVPN No, Nokia VPN can be used No, Nokia VPN can be used No, Nokia VPN can be used Yes, third-party software
Remote frame buffer ?
Screenshot Yes, third-party software[73] Yes, third-party software[73] Yes, third-party software[73] Yes Yes
GPU acceleration Yes No
Official SDK platform(s) Cross-platform, Windows (preferred is Qt), Carbide.c++, Java ME, Web Runtime Widgets, Flash Lite, Python for Symbian Cross-platform, Windows (preferred is Qt), Carbide.c++, Java ME, Web Runtime Widgets, Flash Lite, Python for Symbian Cross-platform, Windows (preferred is Qt), Carbide.c++, Java ME, Web Runtime Widget, Flash Lite, Python for Symbian Cross-platform, Windows (preferred is Qt), Carbide.c++, Java ME, third-party software (OPL)
Status of updates ▲ Discontinued ? Discontinued Discontinued Discontinued Discontinued
First device(s) Nokia N8 (Symbian^3), Nokia C7 (Symbian^3), Nokia X7, Nokia E6 (Anna), Nokia 603, Nokia 700, Nokia 701 (Belle) NTT DOCOMO STYLE Series F-07B Nokia 5800 (2 October 2008) Nokia N96, Nokia N78, Nokia 6210 Navigator and Nokia 6220 Classic (11 February 2008) Sony Ericsson P800 Nokia 9210
Devices Nokia N8, Nokia C6-01, Nokia C7-00, Nokia E7-00, Nokia E6, Nokia X7, Nokia 500, Nokia 603, Nokia 600 (cancelled), Nokia 700, Nokia 701, Nokia 808 PureView NTT DoCoMo: F-06B*,[74] F-07B*,[74] F-08B*,[74] SH-07B†,[74] F-10B,[75] Raku-Raku Phone 7,[75] F-01C*,[76] F-02C*,[76] F-03C*,[76] F-04C*,[76] F-05C*,[76] SH-01C†,[76] SH-02C†,[76] SH-04C†,[76] SH-05C†,[76] SH-06C†,[76] Touch Wood SH-08C†[76] Nokia: 5228, 5230, 5233, 5235, 5250, 5530 XpressMusic, 5800 XpressMusic, 5800 Navigation Edition, C5-03, C6-00, N97, N97 mini, X6;

Samsung: i8910 Omnia HD,[77]

Sony Ericsson: Satio, Vivaz, Vivaz Pro

Nokia: 5320 XpressMusic, 5630 XpressMusic, 5730 XpressMusic, 6210 Navigator, 6220 Classic, 6650 fold, 6710 Navigator, 6720 Classic, 6730 Classic, 6760 Slide, 6790 Surge, E5-00, E51, E52, E55, E71, E72, E75, N78, N79, N82, N85, N86 8MP, N96, X5, C5-00;
Samsung: GT-i8510 (INNOV8), GT-i7110 (Pilot), SGH-L870, SGH-i550, SGH-G810
Sony Ericsson ...
Motorola ...
Nokia 9210, Nokia 9300, Nokia 9300i, Nokia 9500
Latest firmware name Nokia Belle Feature Pack 2/ Belle Refresh Symbian^2 Symbian^1/Series 60 5th Edition Series 60 3rd Edition Feature Pack 2 UIQ ? Series 80

* Manufactured by Fujitsu
† Manufactured by Sharp
▲ Software update service for Nokia Belle and Symbian (S60) phones is discontinued at the end of December 2015

Market share and competition

In Q1 2004 2.4 million Symbian phones were shipped, double the number as in Q1 2003. Symbian Ltd. was particularly impressed by progress made in Japan.[78]

3.7 million devices were shipped in Q3 2004, a growth of 201% compared to Q3 2003 and market share growing from 30.5% to 50.2%. However, in the United States it was much less popular, with a 6% market share in Q3 2004, well behind Palm OS (43%) and Windows Mobile (25%). This has been attributed to North American customers preferring wireless PDAs over smartphones, as well as Nokia's low popularity there.[79]

On 16 November 2006, the 100 millionth smartphone running the OS was shipped.[80] As of 21 July 2009, more than 250 million devices running Symbian OS had been produced.[81]

In 2006, Symbian had 73% of the smartphone market,[82] compared with 22.1% of the market in the second quarter of 2011.[83]

By the end of May 2006, 10 million Symbian-powered phones were sold in Japan, representing 11% of Symbian's total worldwide shipments of 89 million.[84] By November 2007 the figure was 30 million, achieving a market share of 65% by June 2007 in the Japanese market.[85]

Symbian has lost market share over the years as the market has dramatically grown, with new competing platforms entering the market, though its sales have increased during the same timeframe. E.g., although Symbian's share of the global smartphone market dropped from 52.4% in 2008 to 47.2% in 2009, shipments of Symbian devices grew 4.8%, from 74.9 million units to 78.5 million units.[86] From Q2 2009 to Q2 2010, shipments of Symbian devices grew 41.5%, by 8.0 million units, from 19,178,910 units to 27,129,340; compared to an increase of 9.6 million units for Android, 3.3 million units for RIM, and 3.2 million units for Apple.[87]

Prior reports on device shipments as published in February 2010 showed that the Symbian devices formed a 47.2% share of the smart mobile devices shipped in 2009, with RIM having 20.8%, Apple having 15.1% (via iOS), Microsoft having 8.8% (via Windows CE and Windows Mobile) and Android having 4.7%.[86]

In the number of "smart mobile device" sales, Symbian devices were the market leaders for 2010. Statistics showed that Symbian devices formed a 37.6% share of smart mobile devices sold, with Android having 22.7%, RIM having 16%, and Apple having 15.7% (via iOS).[88] Some estimates indicate that the number of mobile devices shipped with the Symbian OS up to the end of Q2 2010 is 385 million.[89]

Over the course of 2009–10, Motorola, Samsung, LG, and Sony Ericsson announced their withdrawal from Symbian in favour of alternative platforms including Google's Android, Microsoft's Windows Phone.[90][91][92][93]

In Q2 2012, according to IDC worldwide market share has dropped to an all-time low of 4.4%.[94]

Criticism

The users of Symbian in the countries with non-Latin alphabets (such as Russia, Ukraine and others) have been criticizing the complicated method of language switching for many years.[95] For example, if a user wants to type a Latin letter, they must call the menu, click the languages item, use arrow keys to choose, for example, the English language from among many other languages, and then press the 'OK' button. After typing the Latin letter, the user must repeat the procedure to return to their native keyboard. This method slows down typing significantly. In touch-phones and QWERTY phones the procedure is slightly different but remains time-consuming. All other mobile operating systems, as well as Nokia's S40 phones, enable switching between two initially selected languages by one click or a single gesture.

Early versions of the firmware for the original Nokia N97, running on Symbian^1/Series 60 5th Edition have been heavily criticized as buggy (also contributed by the low amount of RAM installed in the phone).[96]

In November 2010, Smartphone blog All About Symbian criticized the performance of Symbian's default web browser and recommended the alternative browser Opera Mobile.[97] Nokia's Senior Vice President Jo Harlow promised an updated browser in the first quarter of 2011.[98]

There are many different versions and editions of Symbian, which led to fragmentation. Apps and software may be incompatible when installed across different versions of Symbian.[99]

Malware

Symbian OS is subject to a variety of viruses, the best known of which is Cabir. Usually these send themselves from phone to phone by Bluetooth. So far, none have exploited any flaws in Symbian OS. Instead, they have all asked the user whether they want to install the software, with somewhat prominent warnings that it can't be trusted, although some rely on social engineering, often in the form of messages that come with the malware: rogue software purporting to be a utility, game, or some other application for Symbian.

However, with a view that the average mobile phone user shouldn't have to worry about security, Symbian OS 9.x adopted a Unix-style capability model (permissions per process, not per object). Installed software is theoretically unable to do damaging things (such as costing the user money by sending network data) without being digitally signed – thus making it traceable. Commercial developers who can afford the cost can apply to have their software signed via the Symbian Signed program. Developers also have the option of self-signing their programs. However, the set of available features does not include access to Bluetooth, IrDA, GSM CellID, voice calls, GPS and few others. Some operators opted to disable all certificates other than the Symbian Signed certificates.

Some other hostile programs are listed below, but all of them still require the input of the user to run.

  • Drever.A is a malicious SIS file trojan that attempts to disable the automatic startup from Simworks and Kaspersky Symbian Anti-Virus applications.
  • Locknut.B is a malicious SIS file trojan that pretends to be a patch for Symbian S60 mobile phones. When installed, it drops[clarification needed] a binary that will crash a critical system service component. This will prevent any application from being launched in the phone.
  • Mabir.A is basically Cabir with added MMS functionality. The two are written by the same author,[citation needed] and the code shares many similarities. It spreads using Bluetooth via the same routine as early variants of Cabir. As Mabir.A activates, it will search for the first phone it finds, and starts sending copies of itself to that phone.
  • Fontal.A is an SIS file trojan that installs a corrupted file which causes the phone to fail at reboot. If the user tries to reboot the infected phone, it will be permanently stuck on the reboot screen, and cannot be used without disinfection – that is, the use of the reformat key combination which causes the phone to lose all data. Being a trojan, Fontal cannot spread by itself – the most likely way for the user to get infected would be to acquire the file from untrusted sources, and then install it to the phone, inadvertently or otherwise.

A new form of malware threat to Symbian OS in the form of 'cooked firmware' was demonstrated at the International Malware Conference, Malcon, December 2010, by Indian hacker Atul Alex.[100][101]

Bypassing platform security

Symbian OS 9.x devices can be hacked to remove the platform security introduced in OS 9.1 onwards, allowing users to execute unsigned code.[102] This allows altering system files, and access to previously locked areas of the OS. The hack was criticised by Nokia for potentially increasing the threat posed by mobile viruses as unsigned code can be executed.[103]

Version history

Version Description
EPOC16 EPOC16, originally simply named EPOC, was the operating system developed by Psion in the late 1980s and early 1990s for Psion's "SIBO" (SIxteen Bit Organisers) devices. All EPOC16 devices featured an 8086-family processor and a 16-bit architecture. EPOC16 was a single-user preemptive multitasking operating system, written in Intel 8086 assembly language and C and designed to be delivered in read-only memory (ROM). It supported a simple programming language named Open Programming Language (OPL) and an integrated development environment (IDE) named OVAL. SIBO devices included the: MC200, MC400, Series 3 (1991–98), Series 3a, Series 3c, Series 3mx, Siena, Workabout, and Workabout mx. The MC400 and MC200, the first EPOC16 devices, shipped in 1989.

EPOC16 featured a primarily monochrome, keyboard-operated graphical interface[104] – the hardware for which it was designed originally had pointer input in the form of a digitiser panel.

In the late 1990s, the operating system was referred to as EPOC16 to distinguish it from Psion's then-new EPOC32 OS.

EPOC32 (releases 1 to 5) The first version of EPOC32, Release 1 appeared on the Psion Series 5 ROM v1.0 in 1997. Later, ROM v1.1 featured Release 3. (Release 2 was never publicly available.) These were followed by the Psion Series 5mx, Revo / Revo plus, Psion Series 7 / netBook and netPad (which all featured Release 5).

The EPOC32 operating system, at the time simply referred to as EPOC, was later renamed Symbian OS. Adding to the confusion with names, before the change to Symbian, EPOC16 was often referred to as SIBO to distinguish it from the "new" EPOC. Despite the similarity of the names, EPOC32 and EPOC16 were completely different operating systems, EPOC32 being written in C++ from a new codebase with development beginning during the mid-1990s.

EPOC32 was a pre-emptive multitasking, single user operating system with memory protection, which encourages the application developer to separate their program into an engine and an interface. The Psion line of PDAs come with a graphical user interface called EIKON which is specifically tailored for handheld machines with a keyboard (thus looking perhaps more similar to desktop GUIs than palmtop GUIs[105]). However, one of EPOC's characteristics is the ease with which new GUIs can be developed based on a core set of GUI classes, a feature which has been widely explored from Ericsson R380 and onwards.

EPOC32 was originally developed for the ARM family of processors, including the ARM7, ARM9, StrongARM and Intel's XScale, but can be compiled towards target devices using several other processor types.

During the development of EPOC32, Psion planned to license EPOC to third-party device manufacturers, and spin off its software division as Psion Software. One of the first licensees was the short-lived Geofox, which halted production with less than 1,000 units sold. Ericsson marketed a rebranded Psion Series 5mx called the MC218, and later created the EPOC Release 5.1 based smartphone, the R380. Oregon Scientific also released a budget EPOC device, the Osaris (notable as the only EPOC device to ship with Release 4).

Work started on the 32-bit version in late 1994.

The Series 5 device, released in June 1997, used the first iterations of the EPOC32 OS, codenamed "Protea", and the "Eikon" graphical user interface.

The Oregon Scientific Osaris was the only PDA to use the ER4.

The Psion Series 5mx, Psion Series 7, Psion Revo, Diamond Mako, Psion netBook and Ericsson MC218 were released in 1999 using ER5. A phone project was announced at CeBIT, the Phillips Illium/Accent, but did not achieve a commercial release. This release has been retrospectively dubbed Symbian OS 5.

The first phone using ER5u, the Ericsson R380 was released in November 2000. It was not an open device: software could not be installed. Notably, several never-released Psion prototypes for next generation PDAs, including a Bluetooth Revo successor codenamed Conan, were using ER5u. The 'u' in the name refers to it supporting Unicode.

In June 1998, Psion Software became Symbian Ltd., a major joint venture between Psion and phone manufacturers Ericsson, Motorola, and Nokia. As of Release 6, EPOC was renamed Symbian OS.

Symbian OS 6.0 and 6.1 The OS was renamed Symbian OS and envisioned as the base for a new range of smartphones. This release is sometimes called ER6. Psion gave 130 key staff to the new company and retained a 31% shareholding in the spin-off.

The first 'open' Symbian OS phone, the Nokia 9210 Communicator, was released in June 2001. Bluetooth support was added. Almost 500,000 Symbian phones were shipped in 2001, rising to 2.1 million the following year.

Development of different UIs was made generic with a "reference design strategy" for either 'smartphone' or 'communicator' devices, subdivided further into keyboard- or tablet-based designs. Two reference UIs (DFRDs or Device Family Reference Designs) were shipped: Quartz and Crystal. The former was merged with Ericsson's Ronneby design and became the basis for the UIQ interface; the latter reached the market as the Nokia Series 80 UI.

Later DFRDs were Sapphire, Ruby, and Emerald. Only Sapphire came to market, evolving into the Pearl DFRD and finally the Nokia Series 60 UI, a keypad-based 'square' UI for the first true smartphones. The first one of them was the Nokia 7650 smartphone (featuring Symbian OS 6.1), which was also the first with a built-in camera, with VGA (0.3 Mpx = 640×480) resolution. Other notable S60 Symbian 6.1 devices are the Nokia 3650, the short lived Sendo X and Siemens SX1, the first and the last Symbian phone from Siemens.

Despite these efforts to be generic, the UI was clearly split between competing companies: Crystal or Sapphire was Nokia, Quartz was Ericsson. DFRD was abandoned by Symbian in late 2002, as part of an active retreat from UI development in favour of headless delivery. Pearl was given to Nokia, Quartz development was spun off as UIQ Technology AB, and work with Japanese firms was quickly folded into the MOAP standard.

Symbian OS 7.0 and 7.0s First shipped in 2003. This is an important Symbian release which appeared with all contemporary user interfaces including UIQ (Sony Ericsson P800, P900, P910, Motorola A925, A1000), Series 80 (Nokia 9300, 9500), Series 90 (Nokia 7710), Series 60 (Nokia 3230, 6260, 6600, 6670, 7610) as well as several FOMA phones in Japan. It also added EDGE support and IPv6. Java support was changed from pJava and JavaPhone to one based on the Java ME standard.

One million Symbian phones were shipped in Q1 2003, with the rate increasing to one million a month by the end of 2003.

Symbian OS 7.0s was a version of 7.0 special adapted to have greater backward compatibility with Symbian OS 6.x, partly for compatibility between the Communicator 9500 and its predecessor the Communicator 9210.

In 2004, Psion sold its stake in Symbian. The same year, the first worm for mobile phones using Symbian OS, Cabir, was developed, which used Bluetooth to spread itself to nearby phones. See Cabir and Symbian OS threats.

Symbian OS 8.0 First shipped in 2004, one of its advantages would have been a choice of two different kernels (EKA1 or EKA2). However, the EKA2 kernel version did not ship until Symbian OS 8.1b. The kernels behave more or less identically from user-side, but are internally very different. EKA1 was chosen by some manufacturers to maintain compatibility with old device drivers, while EKA2 was a real-time kernel. 8.0b was deproductised in 2003.

Also included were new APIs to support CDMA, 3G, two-way data streaming, DVB-H, and OpenGL ES with vector graphics and direct screen access.

Symbian OS 8.1 An improved version of 8.0, this was available in 8.1a and 8.1b versions, with EKA1 and EKA2 kernels respectively. The 8.1b version, with EKA2's single-chip phone support but no additional security layer, was popular among Japanese phone companies desiring the real-time support but not allowing open application installation.

The first and maybe the most famous smartphone featuring Symbian OS 8.1a was Nokia N90 in 2005, Nokia's first in Nseries.

Symbian OS 9.0 Symbian OS 9.0 was used for internal Symbian purposes only. It was de-productised in 2004. 9.0 marked the end of the road for EKA1. 8.1a is the final EKA1 version of Symbian OS.

Symbian OS has generally maintained reasonable binary code compatibility. In theory the OS was BC from ER1-ER5, then from 6.0 to 8.1b. Substantial changes were needed for 9.0, related to tools and security, but this should be a one-off event. The move from requiring ARMv4 to requiring ARMv5 did not break backwards compatibility.

Symbian OS 9.1 Released early 2005. It includes many new security related features, including platform security module facilitating mandatory code signing. The new ARM EABI binary model means developers need to retool and the security changes mean they may have to recode. S60 platform 3rd Edition phones have Symbian OS 9.1. Sony Ericsson is shipping the M600 and P990 based on Symbian OS 9.1. The earlier versions had a defect where the phone hangs temporarily after the owner sent a large number of SMS'es. However, on 13 September 2006, Nokia released a small program to fix this defect.[106] Support for Bluetooth 2.0 was also added.

Symbian 9.1 introduced capabilities and a Platform Security framework. To access certain APIs, developers have to sign their application with a digital signature. Basic capabilities are user-grantable and developers can self-sign them, while more advanced capabilities require certification and signing via the Symbian Signed program, which uses independent 'test houses' and phone manufacturers for approval. For example, file writing is a user-grantable capability while access to Multimedia Device Drivers require phone manufacturer approval. A TC TrustCenter ACS Publisher ID certificate is required by the developer for signing applications.

Symbian OS 9.2 Released Q1 2006. Support for OMA Device Management 1.2 (was 1.1.2). Vietnamese language support. S60 3rd Edition Feature Pack 1 phones have Symbian OS 9.2.

Nokia phones with Symbian OS 9.2 OS include the Nokia E71, Nokia E90, Nokia N95, Nokia N82, Nokia N81 and Nokia 5700.

Symbian OS 9.3 Released on 12 July 2006. Upgrades include improved memory management and native support for Wifi 802.11, HSDPA. The Nokia E72, Nokia 5730 XpressMusic, Nokia N79, Nokia N96, Nokia E52, Nokia E75, Nokia 5320 XpressMusic, Sony Ericsson P1 and others feature Symbian OS 9.3.
Symbian OS 9.4 Announced in March 2007. Provides the concept of demand paging which is available from v9.3 onwards. Applications should launch up to 75% faster. Additionally, SQL support is provided by SQLite. Ships with the Samsung i8910 Omnia HD, Nokia N97, Nokia N97 mini, Nokia 5800 XpressMusic, Nokia 5530 XpressMusic, Nokia 5228, Nokia 5230, Nokia 5233, Nokia 5235, Nokia C6-00, Nokia X6, Sony Ericsson Satio, Sony Ericsson Vivaz and Sony Ericsson Vivaz Pro.

Used as the basis for Symbian^1, the first Symbian platform release. The release is also better known as S60 5th edition, as it is the bundled interface for the OS.

Symbian^2 Symbian^2 is a version of Symbian that only used by Japanese manufacturers[citation needed], started selling in Japan market since May 2010.[107] The version is not used by Nokia.[108]
Symbian^3 (Symbian OS 9.5) and Symbian Anna Symbian^3 is an improvement over previous S60 5th Edition and features single touch menus in the user interface, as well as new Symbian OS kernel with hardware-accelerated graphics; further improvements will come in the first half of 2011 including portrait qwerty keyboard, a new browser and split-screen text input. Nokia announced that updates to Symbian^3 interface will be delivered gradually, as they are available; Symbian^4, the previously planned major release, is now discontinued and some of its intended features will be incorporated into Symbian^3 in successive releases, starting with Symbian Anna.
Nokia Belle (Symbian OS 10.1) In the summer of 2011 videos showing an early leaked version of Symbian Belle (original name of Nokia Belle) running on a Nokia N8 were published on YouTube.[109]

On 24 August 2011, Nokia announced it officially for three new smartphones, the Nokia 600 (later replaced by Nokia 603), Nokia 700, and Nokia 701.[110]

Nokia officially renamed Symbian Belle to Nokia Belle in a company blog post.[111][112]

Nokia Belle adds to the Anna improvements with a pull-down status/notification bar, deeper near field communication integration, free-form re-sizable homescreen widgets, and six homescreens instead of the previous three. As of 7 February 2012, Nokia Belle update is available for most phone models through Nokia Suite, coming later to Australia. Users can check the availability at the Nokia homepage.[113]

On 1 March 2012, Nokia announced a Feature Pack 1 update for Nokia Belle which will be available as an update to Nokia 603, 700, 701 (excluding others), and for Nokia 808 PureView natively.

Symbian Carla and Donna were the planned follow-up releases to Belle, to be released in late 2012 and late 2013 respectively. However it was acknowledged in May 2012 that these had been cancelled and that the upcoming Belle Feature Pack 2 would be the last version of the operating system.[114]

The latest software release for Nokia 1st generation Symbian Belle smartphones (Nokia N8, C7, C6-01, Oro, 500, X7, E7, E6) is Nokia Belle Refresh (111.040.1511).[115]

In October 2012, the Nokia Belle Feature Pack 2, widely considered the last major update for Symbian, was released for Nokia 603, 700, 701, and 808 PureView.[116]

List of devices

See also

General

Development-related

References

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Bibliography

External links

  • Symbian foundation blog (which the homepage redirects to)
  • Symbian on Ohloh
  • Symbian at Curlie

Symbian^3 EPL source

  • Most complete Symbian Open Source archive
  • wildducks – Beagleboard port of Symbian S^3
  • Symaptic – C-Make build system Symbian Mercurial Repository (Windows platform)

symbian, confused, with, sybian, symbion, this, article, about, operating, system, other, uses, disambiguation, discontinued, mobile, operating, system, computing, platform, designed, smartphones, originally, developed, proprietary, software, personal, digital. Not to be confused with Sybian or Symbion This article is about the operating system For other uses see Symbian disambiguation Symbian is a discontinued mobile operating system OS and computing platform designed for smartphones 6 It was originally developed as a proprietary software OS for personal digital assistants in 1998 by the Symbian Ltd consortium 7 Symbian OS is a descendant of Psion s EPOC and was released exclusively on ARM processors although an unreleased x86 port existed Symbian was used by many major mobile phone brands like Samsung Motorola Sony Ericsson and above all by Nokia It was also prevalent in Japan by brands including Fujitsu Sharp and Mitsubishi As a pioneer that established the smartphone industry it was the most popular smartphone OS on a worldwide average until the end of 2010 at a time when smartphones were in limited use when it was overtaken by iOS and Android It was notably less popular in North America SymbianHome screen of Nokia Belle Feature Pack 2 last version of Symbian DeveloperSymbian Ltd 1998 2008 Symbian Foundation 2008 11 Nokia 2010 11 Accenture on behalf of Nokia 2011 13 1 Written inC 2 OS familyEPOC Symbian Working stateStill usedSource modelProprietary software 3 formerly Free software 2010 11 Initial release5 June 1997 25 years ago 1997 06 05 as EPOC32 Final releaseNokia Belle Feature Pack 2 2 October 2012 10 years ago 2012 10 02 Marketing targetSmartphonesAvailable in48 languagesList of languagesArabic Arabic Urdu Basque Bulgarian Catalan Chinese Traditional Simplified Croatian Czech Danish Dutch English UK US Estonian Finnish French France Canada Galician German Greek Hebrew Indian Hindi Tamil Marathi Hungarian Icelandic Indonesian Italian Japanese Kazakh Latvian Lithuanian Malay Norwegian Persian Polish Portuguese Portugal Brazil Romanian Russian Serbian Slovak Slovene Spanish Spain Latin America Swedish Tagalog Thai Turkish Ukrainian VietnameseUpdate methodSymbian Signed certificatesPackage manager sis sisx jad jarPlatformsARM x86 4 Kernel typeReal time microkernel EKA2Defaultuser interfaceS60 from 2009 LicenseProprietary software 5 formerly Eclipse PublicOfficial websitesymbian wbr nokia wbr com defunct as of May 2014 symbian wbr org defunct as of 2009 10 Support statusUnsupportedThe Symbian OS platform is formed of two components one being the microkernel based operating system with its associated libraries and the other being the user interface as middleware which provides the graphical shell atop the OS 8 The most prominent user interface was the S60 formerly Series 60 platform built by Nokia first released in 2002 and powering most Nokia Symbian devices UIQ was a competing user interface mostly used by Motorola and Sony Ericsson that focused on pen based devices rather than a traditional keyboard interface from S60 Another interface was the MOAP S platform from carrier NTT DoCoMo in the Japanese market 9 10 Applications of these different interfaces were not compatible with each other despite each being built atop Symbian OS Nokia became the largest shareholder of Symbian Ltd in 2004 and purchased the entire company in 2008 11 The non profit Symbian Foundation was then created to make a royalty free successor to Symbian OS Seeking to unify the platform S60 became the Foundation s favoured interface and UIQ stopped development The touchscreen focused Symbian 1 or S60 5th Edition was created as a result in 2009 Symbian 2 based on MOAP was used by NTT DoCoMo one of the members of the Foundation for the Japanese market Symbian 3 was released in 2010 as the successor to S60 5th Edition by which time it became fully free software The transition from a proprietary operating system to a free software project is believed to be one of the largest in history 12 Symbian 3 received the Anna and Belle updates in 2011 13 14 The Symbian Foundation disintegrated in late 2010 and Nokia took back control of the OS development 15 16 In February 2011 Nokia by now the only remaining company still supporting Symbian outside Japan announced that it would use Microsoft s Windows Phone 7 as its primary smartphone platform while Symbian would be gradually wound down 17 18 Two months later Nokia moved the OS to proprietary licensing only collaborating with the Japanese OEMs 19 and later outsourced Symbian development to Accenture 6 20 Although support was promised until 2016 including two major planned updates by 2012 Nokia had mostly abandoned development and most Symbian developers had already left Accenture 21 and in January 2014 Nokia stopped accepting new or changed Symbian software from developers 22 The Nokia 808 PureView in 2012 was officially the last Symbian smartphone from Nokia 23 NTT DoCoMo continued releasing OPP S Operator Pack Symbian successor of MOAP devices in Japan which still act as middleware on top of Symbian 24 Phones running this include the F 07F ja from Fujitsu and SH 07F ja from Sharp in 2014 Contents 1 History 2 Features 2 1 User interface 2 2 Browser 2 3 Multiple language support 2 4 Application development 3 Application development 3 1 Qt 3 2 Symbian C 3 3 Other languages 3 4 Deployment 4 Architecture 4 1 Technology domains and packages 4 2 Symbian kernel 4 3 Design 4 4 Operating system 5 Symbian UI variants platforms 6 Version comparison 7 Market share and competition 8 Criticism 8 1 Malware 8 2 Bypassing platform security 9 Version history 10 List of devices 11 See also 11 1 General 11 2 Development related 12 References 13 Bibliography 14 External links 14 1 Symbian 3 EPL sourceHistory EditMain articles EPOC operating system S60 software platform MOAP and UIQ Logo of Symbian OS until the Symbian Foundation was formed in 2008 Symbian originated from EPOC32 an operating system created by Psion in the 1990s In June 1998 Psion Software became Symbian Ltd a major joint venture between Psion and phone manufacturers Ericsson Motorola and Nokia Afterwards different software platforms were created for Symbian backed by different groups of mobile phone manufacturers They include S60 Nokia Samsung and LG UIQ Sony Ericsson and Motorola and MOAP S Japanese only such as Fujitsu Sharp etc With no major competition in the smartphone OS then Palm OS and Windows Mobile were comparatively small players Symbian reached as high as 67 of the global smartphone market share in 2006 25 Despite its sizable market share then Symbian was at various stages difficult to develop for First at around early to mid 2000s due to the complexity of then the only native programming languages Open Programming Language OPL and Symbian C and of the OS then the stubborn developer bureaucracy along with high prices of various integrated development environments IDEs and software development kits SDKs which were prohibitive for independent or very small developers and then the subsequent fragmentation which was in part caused by infighting among and within manufacturers each of which also had their own IDEs and SDKs All of this discouraged third party developers and served to cause the native app ecosystem for Symbian not to evolve to a scale later reached by Apple s App Store or Android s Google Play By contrast iPhone OS renamed iOS in 2010 and Android had comparatively simpler design provided easier and much more centralized infrastructure to create and obtain third party apps offered certain developer tools and programming languages with a manageable level of complexity and having abilities such as multitasking and graphics to meet future consumer demands Although Symbian was difficult to program for this issue could be worked around by creating Java Mobile Edition apps ostensibly under a write once run anywhere slogan 26 This wasn t always the case because of fragmentation due to different device screen sizes and differences in levels of Java ME support on various devices In June 2008 Nokia announced the acquisition of Symbian Ltd and a new independent non profit organization called the Symbian Foundation was established Symbian OS and its associated user interfaces S60 UIQ and MOAP S were contributed by their owners Nokia NTT DoCoMo Sony Ericsson and Symbian Ltd to the foundation with the objective of creating the Symbian platform as a royalty free Free software under the Free Software Foundation FSF and Open Source Initiative OSI approved Eclipse Public License EPL The platform was designated as the successor to Symbian OS following the official launch of the Symbian Foundation in April 2009 The Symbian platform was officially made available as Free software in February 2010 27 Nokia became the major contributor to Symbian s code since it then possessed the development resources for both the Symbian OS core and the user interface Since then Nokia maintained its own code repository for the platform development regularly releasing its development to the public repository 28 Symbian was intended to be developed by a community led by the Symbian Foundation which was first announced in June 2008 and which officially launched in April 2009 Its objective was to publish the source code for the entire Symbian platform under the OSI and FSF approved EPL The code was published under EPL on 4 February 2010 Symbian Foundation reported this event to be the largest codebase moved to Free software in history 27 29 However some important components within Symbian OS were licensed from third parties which prevented the foundation from publishing the full source under EPL immediately instead much of the source was published under a more restrictive Symbian Foundation License SFL and access to the full source code was limited to member companies only although membership was open to any organisation 30 Also the Free software Qt framework was introduced to Symbian in 2010 as the primary upgrade path to MeeGo which was to be the next mobile operating system to replace and supplant Symbian on high end devices Qt was by its nature free and very convenient to develop with Several other frameworks were deployed to the platform among them Standard C and C Python Ruby and Adobe Flash Lite IDEs and SDKs were developed and then released for free and application software app development for Symbian picked up In November 2010 the Symbian Foundation announced that due to changes in global economic and market conditions and also a lack of support from members such as Samsung 31 and Sony Ericsson it would transition to a licensing only organisation 30 Nokia announced it would take over the stewardship of the Symbian platform Symbian Foundation would remain the trademark holder and licensing entity and would only have non executive directors involved With market share sliding from 39 in Q32010 to 31 in Q42010 32 Symbian was losing ground to iOS and Android quickly eventually falling behind Android in Q42010 33 Stephen Elop was appointed the CEO of Nokia in September 2010 and on 11 February 2011 he announced a partnership with Microsoft that would see Nokia adopt Windows Phone as its primary smartphone platform 34 and Symbian would be gradually phased out together with MeeGo 18 As a consequence Symbian s market share fell and application developers for Symbian dropped out rapidly Research in June 2011 indicated that over 39 of mobile developers using Symbian at the time of publication were planning to abandon the platform 35 By 5 April 2011 Nokia ceased to make free any portion of the Symbian software and reduced its collaboration to a small group of preselected partners in Japan 5 Source code released under the original EPL remains available in third party repositories 36 including a full set of all public code from the project as of 7 December 2010 37 On 22 June 2011 Nokia made an agreement with Accenture for an outsourcing program Accenture will provide Symbian based software development and support services to Nokia through 2016 20 The transfer of Nokia employees to Accenture was completed on 30 September 2011 and 2 800 Nokia employees became Accenture employees as of October 2011 6 Nokia terminated its support of software development and maintenance for Symbian with effect from 1 January 2014 thereafter refusing to publish new or changed Symbian applications or content in the Nokia Store and terminating its Symbian Signed program for software certification 38 Features EditUser interface Edit Symbian has had a native graphics toolkit since its inception known as AVKON formerly known as Series 60 S60 was designed to be manipulated by a keyboard like interface metaphor such as the 15 key augmented telephone keypad or the mini QWERTY keyboards AVKON based software is binary compatible with Symbian versions up to and including Symbian 3 Symbian 3 includes the Qt framework which is now the recommended user interface toolkit for new applications Qt can also be installed on older Symbian devices Symbian 4 was planned to introduce a new GUI library framework specifically designed for a touch based interface known as UI Extensions for Mobile or UIEMO internal project name Orbit which was built on top of Qt Widget a preview was released in January 2010 however in October 2010 Nokia announced that Orbit UIEMO had been cancelled Nokia later recommended that developers use Qt Quick with QML the new high level declarative UI and scripting framework for creating visually rich touchscreen interfaces that allowed development for both Symbian and MeeGo it would be delivered to existing Symbian 3 devices as a Qt update When more applications gradually feature a user interface reworked in Qt the legacy S60 framework AVKON would be deprecated and no longer included with new devices at some point thus breaking binary compatibility with older S60 applications 39 40 Browser Edit Main articles S60 browser and Opera Mobile Symbian S60 5th edition on a Samsung Omnia HD Symbian 3 and earlier have a built in WebKit based browser Symbian was the first mobile platform to make use of WebKit in June 2005 41 Some older Symbian models have Opera Mobile as their default browser Nokia released a new browser with the release of Symbian Anna with improved speed and an improved user interface 42 Multiple language support Edit Symbian had strong localization support enabling manufacturers and 3rd party application developers to localize Symbian based products to support global distribution Nokia made languages available in the device in language packs a set of languages which cover those commonly spoken in the area where a device variant is to be sold All language packs have in common English or a locally relevant dialect of it The last release Symbian Belle supports these 48 languages with dialects and scripts Arabic Arabic Basque Latin Bulgarian Cyrillic Catalan Latin Chinese PRC Simplified Chinese Chinese Hong Kong Traditional Chinese Chinese Taiwan Traditional Chinese Croatian Latin Czech Latin Danish Latin Dutch Latin English UK Latin English US Latin Estonian Latin Finnish Latin French Latin French Canadian Latin Galician Latin German Latin Greek Greek Hebrew Hebrew Hindi Indian Hungarian Latin Icelandic Latin Indonesian Bahasa Indonesia Latin Italian Latin Japanese Japanese script Kazakh Cyrillic Latvian Latin Lithuanian Latin Malay Bahasa Malaysia Latin Marathi India Maharashtra Norwegian Latin Persian Farsi Polish Latin Portuguese Latin Portuguese Brazilian Latin Romanian Romania Latin Russian Cyrillic Serbian Latin Slovak Latin Slovene Latin Spanish Latin Spanish Latin America Latin Swedish Latin Tagalog Filipino Latin Thai Thai Tamil India Turkish Latin Ukrainian Cyrillic Urdu Arabic Vietnamese Latin Symbian Belle marks the introduction of Kazakh while Korean is no longer supported Japanese is only available on Symbian 2 devices as they are made in Japan and on other Symbian devices Japanese is still supported with limitations Application development Edit From 2010 Symbian switched to using standard C with Qt as the main SDK which can be used with either Qt Creator or Carbide c Qt supports the older Symbian S60 3rd starting with Feature Pack 1 a k a S60 3 1 and Symbian S60 5th Edition a k a S60 5 01b releases as well as the new Symbian platform It also supports Maemo and MeeGo Windows Linux and Mac OS X 43 44 Alternative application development can be done using Python see Python for S60 Adobe Flash Lite or Java ME Symbian OS previously used a Symbian specific C version along with CodeWarrior and later Carbide c integrated development environment IDE as the native application development environment Web Run time WRT is a portable application framework that allows creating widgets on the S60 Platform it is an extension to the S60 WebKit based browser that allows launching multiple browser instances as separate JavaScript applications 45 46 Application development EditQt Edit As of 2010 the SDK for Symbian is standard C using Qt It can be used with either Qt Creator or Carbide the older IDE previously used for Symbian development 43 47 A phone simulator allows testing of Qt apps Apps compiled for the simulator are compiled to native code for the development platform rather than having to be emulated 48 Application development can either use C or QML Symbian C Edit As Symbian OS is written in C using Symbian Software s coding standards it is possible to develop using Symbian C although it is not a standard implementation Before the release of the Qt SDK this was the standard development environment There were multiple platforms based on Symbian OS that provided software development kits SDKs for application developers wishing to target Symbian OS devices the main ones being UIQ and S60 Individual phone products or families often had SDKs or SDK extensions downloadable from the maker s website too The SDKs contain documentation the header files and library files needed to build Symbian OS software and a Windows based emulator WINS Up until Symbian OS version 8 the SDKs also included a version of the GNU Compiler Collection GCC compiler a cross compiler needed to build software to work on the device Symbian OS 9 and the Symbian platform use a new application binary interface ABI and needed a different compiler A choice of compilers is available including a newer version of GCC see external links below Unfortunately Symbian C programming has a steep learning curve as Symbian C requires the use of special techniques such as descriptors active objects and the cleanup stack This can make even relatively simple programs initially harder to implement than in other environments It is possible that the techniques developed for the much more restricted mobile hardware and compilers of the 1990s caused extra complexity in source code because programmers are required to concentrate on low level details instead of more application specific features As of 2010 these issues are no longer the case when using standard C with the Qt SDK Symbian C programming is commonly done with an integrated development environment IDE For earlier versions of Symbian OS the commercial IDE CodeWarrior for Symbian OS was favoured The CodeWarrior tools were replaced during 2006 by Carbide c an Eclipse based IDE developed by Nokia Carbide c is offered in four different versions Express Developer Professional and OEM with increasing levels of capability Fully featured software can be created and released with the Express edition which is free Features such as UI design crash debugging etc are available in the other charged for editions Microsoft Visual Studio 2003 and 2005 are also supported via the Carbide vs plugin Other languages Edit Symbian v9 1 with a S60v3 interface on a Nokia E61 Symbian devices can also be programmed using Python Java ME Flash Lite Ruby NET Web Runtime WRT Widgets and Standard C C 49 Visual Basic programmers can use NS Basic to develop apps for S60 3rd Edition and UIQ 3 devices In the past Visual Basic Visual Basic NET and C development for Symbian were possible through AppForge Crossfire a plug in for Microsoft Visual Studio On 13 March 2007 AppForge ceased operations Oracle purchased the intellectual property but announced that they did not plan to sell or provide support for former AppForge products Net60 a NET compact framework for Symbian which is developed by redFIVElabs is sold as a commercial product With Net60 VB NET and C and other source code is compiled into an intermediate language IL which is executed within the Symbian OS using a just in time compiler As of 18 January 2010 RedFiveLabs has ceased development of Net60 with this announcement on their landing page At this stage we are pursuing some options to sell the IP so that Net60 may continue to have a future There is also a version of a Borland IDE for Symbian OS Symbian development is also possible on Linux and macOS using tools and methods developed by the community partly enabled by Symbian releasing the source code for key tools A plug in that allows development of Symbian OS applications in Apple s Xcode IDE for Mac OS X was available 50 Java ME applications for Symbian OS are developed using standard techniques and tools such as the Sun Java Wireless Toolkit formerly the J2ME Wireless Toolkit They are packaged as JAR and possibly JAD files Both CLDC and CDC applications can be created with NetBeans Other tools include SuperWaba which can be used to build Symbian 7 0 and 7 0s programs using Java Nokia S60 phones can also run Python scripts when the interpreter Python for S60 is installed with a custom made API that allows for Bluetooth support and such There is also an interactive console to allow the user to write Python scripts directly from the phone Deployment Edit Once developed Symbian applications need to find a route to customers mobile phones They are packaged in SIS files which may be installed over the air via PC connect Bluetooth or on a memory card An alternative is to partner with a phone manufacturer and have the software included on the phone itself Applications must be Symbian Signed for Symbian OS 9 x to make use of certain capabilities system capabilities restricted capabilities and device manufacturer capabilities 51 Applications could be signed for free in 2010 52 Architecture EditTechnology domains and packages Edit Symbian s design is subdivided into technology domains 53 each of which comprises a set of software packages 54 Each technology domain has its own roadmap and the Symbian Foundation has a team of technology managers who manage these technology domain roadmaps Every package is allocated to exactly one technology domain based on the general functional area to which the package contributes and by which it may be influenced By grouping related packages by themes the Symbian Foundation hopes to encourage a strong community to form around them and to generate discussion and review The Symbian System Model 55 illustrates the scope of each of the technology domains across the platform packages Packages are owned and maintained by a package owner a named individual from an organization member of the Symbian Foundation who accepts code contributions from the wider Symbian community and is responsible for package Symbian kernel Edit The Symbian kernel EKA2 supports sufficiently fast real time response to build a single core phone around it that is a phone in which a single processor core executes both the user applications and the signalling stack 56 The real time kernel has a microkernel architecture containing only the minimum most basic primitives and functionality for maximum robustness availability and responsiveness It has been termed a nanokernel because it needs an extended kernel to implement any other abstractions It contains a scheduler memory management and device drivers with networking telephony and file system support services in the OS Services Layer or the Base Services Layer The inclusion of device drivers means the kernel is not a true microkernel Design Edit Symbian features pre emptive multitasking and memory protection like other operating systems especially those created for use on desktop computers EPOC s approach to multitasking was inspired by VMS and is based on asynchronous server based events Symbian OS was created with three systems design principles in mind the integrity and security of user data is paramount user time must not be wasted all resources are scarceTo best follow these principles Symbian uses a microkernel has a request and callback approach to services and maintains separation between user interface and engine The OS is optimised for low power battery based devices and for read only memory ROM based systems e g features like XIP and re entrancy in shared libraries The OS and application software follows an object oriented programming design named model view controller MVC Later OS iterations diluted this approach in response to market demands notably with the introduction of a real time kernel and a platform security model in versions 8 and 9 There is a strong emphasis on conserving resources which is exemplified by Symbian specific programming idioms like descriptors and a cleanup stack Similar methods exist to conserve storage space Further all Symbian programming is event based and the central processing unit CPU is switched into a low power mode when applications are not directly dealing with an event This is done via a programming idiom called active objects Similarly the Symbian approach to threads and processes is driven by reducing overheads Operating system Edit The All over Model contains the following layers from top to bottom UI Framework Layer Application Services Layer Java ME OS Services Layer generic OS services communications services multimedia and graphics services connectivity services Base Services Layer Kernel Services amp Hardware Interface LayerThe Base Services Layer is the lowest level reachable by user side operations it includes the File Server and User Library a Plug In Framework which manages all plug ins Store Central Repository DBMS and cryptographic services It also includes the Text Window Server and the Text Shell the two basic services from which a completely functional port can be created without the need for any higher layer services Symbian has a microkernel architecture which means that the minimum necessary is within the kernel to maximise robustness availability and responsiveness It contains a scheduler memory management and device drivers but other services like networking telephony and file system support are placed in the OS Services Layer or the Base Services Layer The inclusion of device drivers means the kernel is not a true microkernel The EKA2 real time kernel which has been termed a nanokernel contains only the most basic primitives and requires an extended kernel to implement any other abstractions Symbian is designed to emphasise compatibility with other devices especially removable media file systems Early development of EPOC led to adopting File Allocation Table FAT as the internal file system and this remains but an object oriented persistence model was placed over the underlying FAT to provide a POSIX style interface and a streaming model The internal data formats rely on using the same APIs that create the data to run all file manipulations This has resulted in data dependence and associated difficulties with changes and data migration There is a large networking and communication subsystem which has three main servers called ETEL EPOC telephony ESOCK EPOC sockets and C32 responsible for serial communication Each of these has a plug in scheme For example ESOCK allows different PRT protocol modules to implement various networking protocol schemes The subsystem also contains code that supports short range communication links such as Bluetooth IrDA and USB There is also a large volume of user interface UI Code Only the base classes and substructure were contained in Symbian OS while most of the actual user interfaces were maintained by third parties This is no longer the case The three major UIs S60 UIQ and MOAP were contributed to Symbian in 2009 Symbian also contains graphics text layout and font rendering libraries All native Symbian C applications are built up from three framework classes defined by the application architecture an application class a document class and an application user interface class These classes create the fundamental application behaviour The remaining needed functions the application view data model and data interface are created independently and interact solely through their APIs with the other classes Many other things do not yet fit into this model for example SyncML Java ME providing another set of APIs on top of most of the OS and multimedia Many of these are frameworks and vendors are expected to supply plug ins to these frameworks from third parties for example Helix Player for multimedia codecs This has the advantage that the APIs to such areas of functionality are the same on many phone models and that vendors get a lot of flexibility But it means that phone vendors needed to do a great deal of integration work to make a Symbian OS phone Symbian includes a reference user interface called TechView It provides a basis for starting customisation and is the environment in which much Symbian test and example code runs It is very similar to the user interface from the Psion Series 5 personal organiser and is not used for any production phone user interface Symbian UI variants platforms EditSymbian as it advanced to OS version 7 0 spun off into several different graphical user interfaces each backed by a certain company or group of companies Unlike Android OS s cosmetic GUIs Symbian GUIs are referred to as platforms due to more significant modifications and integrations Things became more complicated when applications developed for different Symbian GUI platforms were not compatible with each other and this led to OS fragmentation 57 User Interfaces platforms that run on or are based on Symbian OS include S60 Symbian also called Series 60 It was backed mainly by Nokia There are several editions of this platform appearing first as S60 1st Edition on Nokia 7650 It was followed by S60 2nd Edition e g Nokia N70 S60 3rd Edition e g Nokia N73 and S60 5th Edition which introduced touch UI e g Nokia N97 The name S60 was changed to just Symbian after the formation of Symbian Foundation and subsequently called Symbian 1 2 and 3 Series 80 used by Nokia Communicators such as Nokia 9300i Series 90 Touch and button based The only phone using this platform is Nokia 7710 UIQ backed mainly by Sony Ericsson and then Motorola It is compatible with both buttons and touch stylus based inputs The last major release version is UIQ3 1 in 2008 on Sony Ericsson G900 It was discontinued after the formation of Symbian Foundation and the decision to consolidate different Symbian UI variants into one led to the adoption of S60 as the version going forward 58 MOAP Mobile Oriented Applications Platform Japan Only used by Fujitsu Mitsubishi Sony Ericsson and Sharp developed phones for NTT DoCoMo It uses an interface developed specifically for DoCoMo s FOMA Freedom of Mobile Access network brand and is based on the UI from earlier Fujitsu FOMA models The user cannot install new C applications Japan Only OPP Japan Only successor of MOAP used on NTT DoCoMo s FOMA phone Version comparison EditFeature Symbian 3 Anna Belle Symbian 2 59 Symbian 1 Series 60 5th Edition Series 60 3rd Edition UIQ 2 0 Series 80Year released 2010 Symbian 3 2011 Symbian Anna Nokia Belle 2010 Japan only with MOAP OPP middleware 2008 2006 2002 2001Company Symbian Foundation later Nokia Symbian Foundation Symbian Foundation Nokia UIQ Technology NokiaSymbian OS version 9 5 Symbian 3 Symbian Anna 10 1 Nokia Belle 9 4 9 3Series 60 version 5 2 Symbian 3 Symbian Anna 60 5 3 Nokia Belle 5 4 Nokia Belle FP1 5 1 5th Edition 3rd Edition Feature Pack 2 N A N ATouch input support Yes Yes Yes No Yes NoMulti touch input support Yes No No No NoNumber of customizable home screens Three to six Five on Nokia E6 and Nokia 500 six on Nokia Belle One Two OneWi Fi version support B G N B G B G B G B GUSB on the go support Yes No NoDVB H support Yes with extra headset 61 Un known but have 1seg support 62 Yes with extra headset Yes with extra headsetShort range FM transmitter support Yes Yes Yes No NoFM radio support Yes Yes Yes Yes NoExternal Storage Card Support MicroSD up to 32GB MicroSD MicroSD MicroSD MiniSD Memory Stick MicroSD MultiMedia Card MultiMedia CardAdobe Flash support Yes Flash Lite native version 4 0 upgradable Yes Flash Lite native version 3 1 upgradable Yes Flash Lite native version 3 1 upgradable Yes Flash native version 6 not upgradableMicrosoft Silverlight support No 63 citation needed Yes 64 65 No 66 citation needed NoOpenGL ES support Yes version 2 0 NoSQLite support Yes Yes Yes 67 CPU architecture support ARM SH Mobile ARM ARM ARMProgrammed in C Qt C Qt C QtLicense Eclipse Public License Since 31 March 2011 Nokia Symbian License 1 0 proprietary SFL license while some portions of source code are EPL licensed Public issues list No morePackage manager sis sisx sis sisx sis sisx sis sisx sis sisxNon English languages support Yes mainly Japanese Yes Yes Yes YesUnderlining spell checker Yes Yes 68 Yes YesKeeps state on shutdown or crash No No No NoInternal search Yes Yes 62 Yes Yes Yes YesProxy server Yes Yes Yes Yes YesOn device encryption Yes Yes 62 Yes YesCut copy and paste support Yes Yes 68 Yes Yes Yes YesUndo No No Yes Yes YesDefault Web Browser for S60 WebKit engine version 7 2 engine version 525 Symbian 3 69 version 7 3 engine version 533 4 Symbian Anna version 7 1 4 engine version 525 version 7 3 engine version 533 4 for 9 selected units after firmware updates released in summer 2011 engine version 413 Nokia N79 N A N AOfficial App Store Nokia Ovi Store i appli i Widget 68 Nokia Ovi Store Sony Ericsson PlayNow Arena Nokia Ovi Store Download Email sync protocol support POP3 IMAP i mode mail 68 POP3 IMAP POP3 IMAP POP3 IMAP POP3 IMAPNFC Support Yes No No No No NoPush alerts Yes Yes Yes Yes YesVoice recognition Yes Yes Yes YesTethering USB Bluetooth mobile Wi Fi hotspot with third party software USB Bluetooth mobile Wi Fi hotspot with third party software USB Bluetooth mobile Wi Fi hotspot with third party software USB Bluetooth Text document support Mobile Office Applications PDF Mobile Office Applications PDF Mobile Office Applications PDF Mobile Office Applications PDF Mobile Office Applications PDF Mobile Office Applications PDFAudio playback All wma 62 aac citation needed All All wav mp3Video playback H 263 H 264 WMV MPEG4 MPEG4 HD 720p 25 30 frames s MKV DivX XviD WMV 68 MPEG4 citation needed H 263 WMV MPEG4 3GPP 3GPP2 H 263 WMV MPEG4 3GPP 3GPP2 H 263 3GPP 3GPP2Turn by turn GPS Yes with third party software or Nokia Maps Yes with monthly paid Docomo Map Navi 70 ドコモ地図ナビ 71 Yes with third party software or Nokia Maps Yes with third party software or Nokia Maps Yes with third party softwareVideo out Nokia AV 3 5mm PAL NTSC HDMI DLNA via Nokia Play To HDMI and Nokia AV 3 5mm PAL NTSC Nokia AV 3 5mm PAL NTSC NoMultitasking Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes YesDesktop interactive widgets Yes Yes Yes NoIntegrated hardware keyboard Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes YesBluetooth keyboard Yes Yes 62 Yes Yes YesVideo conference front video camera Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes YesCan share data via Bluetooth with all devices Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes YesSkype third party software Yes 72 Yes 72 Yes 72 Facebook IM chat Yes Yes YesSecure Shell SSH Yes third party software Yes third party software Yes third party softwareOpenVPN No Nokia VPN can be used No Nokia VPN can be used No Nokia VPN can be used Yes third party softwareRemote frame buffer Screenshot Yes third party software 73 Yes third party software 73 Yes third party software 73 Yes YesGPU acceleration Yes NoOfficial SDK platform s Cross platform Windows preferred is Qt Carbide c Java ME Web Runtime Widgets Flash Lite Python for Symbian Cross platform Windows preferred is Qt Carbide c Java ME Web Runtime Widgets Flash Lite Python for Symbian Cross platform Windows preferred is Qt Carbide c Java ME Web Runtime Widget Flash Lite Python for Symbian Cross platform Windows preferred is Qt Carbide c Java ME third party software OPL Status of updates Discontinued Discontinued Discontinued Discontinued DiscontinuedFirst device s Nokia N8 Symbian 3 Nokia C7 Symbian 3 Nokia X7 Nokia E6 Anna Nokia 603 Nokia 700 Nokia 701 Belle NTT DOCOMO STYLE Series F 07B Nokia 5800 2 October 2008 Nokia N96 Nokia N78 Nokia 6210 Navigator and Nokia 6220 Classic 11 February 2008 Sony Ericsson P800 Nokia 9210Devices Nokia N8 Nokia C6 01 Nokia C7 00 Nokia E7 00 Nokia E6 Nokia X7 Nokia 500 Nokia 603 Nokia 600 cancelled Nokia 700 Nokia 701 Nokia 808 PureView NTT DoCoMo F 06B 74 F 07B 74 F 08B 74 SH 07B 74 F 10B 75 Raku Raku Phone 7 75 F 01C 76 F 02C 76 F 03C 76 F 04C 76 F 05C 76 SH 01C 76 SH 02C 76 SH 04C 76 SH 05C 76 SH 06C 76 Touch Wood SH 08C 76 Nokia 5228 5230 5233 5235 5250 5530 XpressMusic 5800 XpressMusic 5800 Navigation Edition C5 03 C6 00 N97 N97 mini X6 Samsung i8910 Omnia HD 77 Sony Ericsson Satio Vivaz Vivaz Pro Nokia 5320 XpressMusic 5630 XpressMusic 5730 XpressMusic 6210 Navigator 6220 Classic 6650 fold 6710 Navigator 6720 Classic 6730 Classic 6760 Slide 6790 Surge E5 00 E51 E52 E55 E71 E72 E75 N78 N79 N82 N85 N86 8MP N96 X5 C5 00 Samsung GT i8510 INNOV8 GT i7110 Pilot SGH L870 SGH i550 SGH G810 Sony Ericsson Motorola Nokia 9210 Nokia 9300 Nokia 9300i Nokia 9500Latest firmware name Nokia Belle Feature Pack 2 Belle Refresh Symbian 2 Symbian 1 Series 60 5th Edition Series 60 3rd Edition Feature Pack 2 UIQ Series 80 Manufactured by Fujitsu Manufactured by Sharp Software update service for Nokia Belle and Symbian S60 phones is discontinued at the end of December 2015Market share and competition EditIn Q1 2004 2 4 million Symbian phones were shipped double the number as in Q1 2003 Symbian Ltd was particularly impressed by progress made in Japan 78 3 7 million devices were shipped in Q3 2004 a growth of 201 compared to Q3 2003 and market share growing from 30 5 to 50 2 However in the United States it was much less popular with a 6 market share in Q3 2004 well behind Palm OS 43 and Windows Mobile 25 This has been attributed to North American customers preferring wireless PDAs over smartphones as well as Nokia s low popularity there 79 On 16 November 2006 the 100 millionth smartphone running the OS was shipped 80 As of 21 July 2009 more than 250 million devices running Symbian OS had been produced 81 In 2006 Symbian had 73 of the smartphone market 82 compared with 22 1 of the market in the second quarter of 2011 83 By the end of May 2006 10 million Symbian powered phones were sold in Japan representing 11 of Symbian s total worldwide shipments of 89 million 84 By November 2007 the figure was 30 million achieving a market share of 65 by June 2007 in the Japanese market 85 Symbian has lost market share over the years as the market has dramatically grown with new competing platforms entering the market though its sales have increased during the same timeframe E g although Symbian s share of the global smartphone market dropped from 52 4 in 2008 to 47 2 in 2009 shipments of Symbian devices grew 4 8 from 74 9 million units to 78 5 million units 86 From Q2 2009 to Q2 2010 shipments of Symbian devices grew 41 5 by 8 0 million units from 19 178 910 units to 27 129 340 compared to an increase of 9 6 million units for Android 3 3 million units for RIM and 3 2 million units for Apple 87 Prior reports on device shipments as published in February 2010 showed that the Symbian devices formed a 47 2 share of the smart mobile devices shipped in 2009 with RIM having 20 8 Apple having 15 1 via iOS Microsoft having 8 8 via Windows CE and Windows Mobile and Android having 4 7 86 In the number of smart mobile device sales Symbian devices were the market leaders for 2010 Statistics showed that Symbian devices formed a 37 6 share of smart mobile devices sold with Android having 22 7 RIM having 16 and Apple having 15 7 via iOS 88 Some estimates indicate that the number of mobile devices shipped with the Symbian OS up to the end of Q2 2010 is 385 million 89 Over the course of 2009 10 Motorola Samsung LG and Sony Ericsson announced their withdrawal from Symbian in favour of alternative platforms including Google s Android Microsoft s Windows Phone 90 91 92 93 In Q2 2012 according to IDC worldwide market share has dropped to an all time low of 4 4 94 Criticism EditThe users of Symbian in the countries with non Latin alphabets such as Russia Ukraine and others have been criticizing the complicated method of language switching for many years 95 For example if a user wants to type a Latin letter they must call the menu click the languages item use arrow keys to choose for example the English language from among many other languages and then press the OK button After typing the Latin letter the user must repeat the procedure to return to their native keyboard This method slows down typing significantly In touch phones and QWERTY phones the procedure is slightly different but remains time consuming All other mobile operating systems as well as Nokia s S40 phones enable switching between two initially selected languages by one click or a single gesture Early versions of the firmware for the original Nokia N97 running on Symbian 1 Series 60 5th Edition have been heavily criticized as buggy also contributed by the low amount of RAM installed in the phone 96 In November 2010 Smartphone blog All About Symbian criticized the performance of Symbian s default web browser and recommended the alternative browser Opera Mobile 97 Nokia s Senior Vice President Jo Harlow promised an updated browser in the first quarter of 2011 98 There are many different versions and editions of Symbian which led to fragmentation Apps and software may be incompatible when installed across different versions of Symbian 99 Malware Edit Main article Mobile virus See also Mobile security Symbian OS is subject to a variety of viruses the best known of which is Cabir Usually these send themselves from phone to phone by Bluetooth So far none have exploited any flaws in Symbian OS Instead they have all asked the user whether they want to install the software with somewhat prominent warnings that it can t be trusted although some rely on social engineering often in the form of messages that come with the malware rogue software purporting to be a utility game or some other application for Symbian However with a view that the average mobile phone user shouldn t have to worry about security Symbian OS 9 x adopted a Unix style capability model permissions per process not per object Installed software is theoretically unable to do damaging things such as costing the user money by sending network data without being digitally signed thus making it traceable Commercial developers who can afford the cost can apply to have their software signed via the Symbian Signed program Developers also have the option of self signing their programs However the set of available features does not include access to Bluetooth IrDA GSM CellID voice calls GPS and few others Some operators opted to disable all certificates other than the Symbian Signed certificates Some other hostile programs are listed below but all of them still require the input of the user to run Drever A is a malicious SIS file trojan that attempts to disable the automatic startup from Simworks and Kaspersky Symbian Anti Virus applications Locknut B is a malicious SIS file trojan that pretends to be a patch for Symbian S60 mobile phones When installed it drops clarification needed a binary that will crash a critical system service component This will prevent any application from being launched in the phone Mabir A is basically Cabir with added MMS functionality The two are written by the same author citation needed and the code shares many similarities It spreads using Bluetooth via the same routine as early variants of Cabir As Mabir A activates it will search for the first phone it finds and starts sending copies of itself to that phone Fontal A is an SIS file trojan that installs a corrupted file which causes the phone to fail at reboot If the user tries to reboot the infected phone it will be permanently stuck on the reboot screen and cannot be used without disinfection that is the use of the reformat key combination which causes the phone to lose all data Being a trojan Fontal cannot spread by itself the most likely way for the user to get infected would be to acquire the file from untrusted sources and then install it to the phone inadvertently or otherwise A new form of malware threat to Symbian OS in the form of cooked firmware was demonstrated at the International Malware Conference Malcon December 2010 by Indian hacker Atul Alex 100 101 Bypassing platform security Edit Symbian OS 9 x devices can be hacked to remove the platform security introduced in OS 9 1 onwards allowing users to execute unsigned code 102 This allows altering system files and access to previously locked areas of the OS The hack was criticised by Nokia for potentially increasing the threat posed by mobile viruses as unsigned code can be executed 103 Version history EditVersion DescriptionEPOC16 EPOC16 originally simply named EPOC was the operating system developed by Psion in the late 1980s and early 1990s for Psion s SIBO SIxteen Bit Organisers devices All EPOC16 devices featured an 8086 family processor and a 16 bit architecture EPOC16 was a single user preemptive multitasking operating system written in Intel 8086 assembly language and C and designed to be delivered in read only memory ROM It supported a simple programming language named Open Programming Language OPL and an integrated development environment IDE named OVAL SIBO devices included the MC200 MC400 Series 3 1991 98 Series 3a Series 3c Series 3mx Siena Workabout and Workabout mx The MC400 and MC200 the first EPOC16 devices shipped in 1989 EPOC16 featured a primarily monochrome keyboard operated graphical interface 104 the hardware for which it was designed originally had pointer input in the form of a digitiser panel In the late 1990s the operating system was referred to as EPOC16 to distinguish it from Psion s then new EPOC32 OS EPOC32 releases 1 to 5 The first version of EPOC32 Release 1 appeared on the Psion Series 5 ROM v1 0 in 1997 Later ROM v1 1 featured Release 3 Release 2 was never publicly available These were followed by the Psion Series 5mx Revo Revo plus Psion Series 7 netBook and netPad which all featured Release 5 The EPOC32 operating system at the time simply referred to as EPOC was later renamed Symbian OS Adding to the confusion with names before the change to Symbian EPOC16 was often referred to as SIBO to distinguish it from the new EPOC Despite the similarity of the names EPOC32 and EPOC16 were completely different operating systems EPOC32 being written in C from a new codebase with development beginning during the mid 1990s EPOC32 was a pre emptive multitasking single user operating system with memory protection which encourages the application developer to separate their program into an engine and an interface The Psion line of PDAs come with a graphical user interface called EIKON which is specifically tailored for handheld machines with a keyboard thus looking perhaps more similar to desktop GUIs than palmtop GUIs 105 However one of EPOC s characteristics is the ease with which new GUIs can be developed based on a core set of GUI classes a feature which has been widely explored from Ericsson R380 and onwards EPOC32 was originally developed for the ARM family of processors including the ARM7 ARM9 StrongARM and Intel s XScale but can be compiled towards target devices using several other processor types During the development of EPOC32 Psion planned to license EPOC to third party device manufacturers and spin off its software division as Psion Software One of the first licensees was the short lived Geofox which halted production with less than 1 000 units sold Ericsson marketed a rebranded Psion Series 5mx called the MC218 and later created the EPOC Release 5 1 based smartphone the R380 Oregon Scientific also released a budget EPOC device the Osaris notable as the only EPOC device to ship with Release 4 Work started on the 32 bit version in late 1994 The Series 5 device released in June 1997 used the first iterations of the EPOC32 OS codenamed Protea and the Eikon graphical user interface The Oregon Scientific Osaris was the only PDA to use the ER4 The Psion Series 5mx Psion Series 7 Psion Revo Diamond Mako Psion netBook and Ericsson MC218 were released in 1999 using ER5 A phone project was announced at CeBIT the Phillips Illium Accent but did not achieve a commercial release This release has been retrospectively dubbed Symbian OS 5 The first phone using ER5u the Ericsson R380 was released in November 2000 It was not an open device software could not be installed Notably several never released Psion prototypes for next generation PDAs including a Bluetooth Revo successor codenamed Conan were using ER5u The u in the name refers to it supporting Unicode In June 1998 Psion Software became Symbian Ltd a major joint venture between Psion and phone manufacturers Ericsson Motorola and Nokia As of Release 6 EPOC was renamed Symbian OS Symbian OS 6 0 and 6 1 The OS was renamed Symbian OS and envisioned as the base for a new range of smartphones This release is sometimes called ER6 Psion gave 130 key staff to the new company and retained a 31 shareholding in the spin off The first open Symbian OS phone the Nokia 9210 Communicator was released in June 2001 Bluetooth support was added Almost 500 000 Symbian phones were shipped in 2001 rising to 2 1 million the following year Development of different UIs was made generic with a reference design strategy for either smartphone or communicator devices subdivided further into keyboard or tablet based designs Two reference UIs DFRDs or Device Family Reference Designs were shipped Quartz and Crystal The former was merged with Ericsson s Ronneby design and became the basis for the UIQ interface the latter reached the market as the Nokia Series 80 UI Later DFRDs were Sapphire Ruby and Emerald Only Sapphire came to market evolving into the Pearl DFRD and finally the Nokia Series 60 UI a keypad based square UI for the first true smartphones The first one of them was the Nokia 7650 smartphone featuring Symbian OS 6 1 which was also the first with a built in camera with VGA 0 3 Mpx 640 480 resolution Other notable S60 Symbian 6 1 devices are the Nokia 3650 the short lived Sendo X and Siemens SX1 the first and the last Symbian phone from Siemens Despite these efforts to be generic the UI was clearly split between competing companies Crystal or Sapphire was Nokia Quartz was Ericsson DFRD was abandoned by Symbian in late 2002 as part of an active retreat from UI development in favour of headless delivery Pearl was given to Nokia Quartz development was spun off as UIQ Technology AB and work with Japanese firms was quickly folded into the MOAP standard Symbian OS 7 0 and 7 0s First shipped in 2003 This is an important Symbian release which appeared with all contemporary user interfaces including UIQ Sony Ericsson P800 P900 P910 Motorola A925 A1000 Series 80 Nokia 9300 9500 Series 90 Nokia 7710 Series 60 Nokia 3230 6260 6600 6670 7610 as well as several FOMA phones in Japan It also added EDGE support and IPv6 Java support was changed from pJava and JavaPhone to one based on the Java ME standard One million Symbian phones were shipped in Q1 2003 with the rate increasing to one million a month by the end of 2003 Symbian OS 7 0s was a version of 7 0 special adapted to have greater backward compatibility with Symbian OS 6 x partly for compatibility between the Communicator 9500 and its predecessor the Communicator 9210 In 2004 Psion sold its stake in Symbian The same year the first worm for mobile phones using Symbian OS Cabir was developed which used Bluetooth to spread itself to nearby phones See Cabir and Symbian OS threats Symbian OS 8 0 First shipped in 2004 one of its advantages would have been a choice of two different kernels EKA1 or EKA2 However the EKA2 kernel version did not ship until Symbian OS 8 1b The kernels behave more or less identically from user side but are internally very different EKA1 was chosen by some manufacturers to maintain compatibility with old device drivers while EKA2 was a real time kernel 8 0b was deproductised in 2003 Also included were new APIs to support CDMA 3G two way data streaming DVB H and OpenGL ES with vector graphics and direct screen access Symbian OS 8 1 An improved version of 8 0 this was available in 8 1a and 8 1b versions with EKA1 and EKA2 kernels respectively The 8 1b version with EKA2 s single chip phone support but no additional security layer was popular among Japanese phone companies desiring the real time support but not allowing open application installation The first and maybe the most famous smartphone featuring Symbian OS 8 1a was Nokia N90 in 2005 Nokia s first in Nseries Symbian OS 9 0 Symbian OS 9 0 was used for internal Symbian purposes only It was de productised in 2004 9 0 marked the end of the road for EKA1 8 1a is the final EKA1 version of Symbian OS Symbian OS has generally maintained reasonable binary code compatibility In theory the OS was BC from ER1 ER5 then from 6 0 to 8 1b Substantial changes were needed for 9 0 related to tools and security but this should be a one off event The move from requiring ARMv4 to requiring ARMv5 did not break backwards compatibility Symbian OS 9 1 Released early 2005 It includes many new security related features including platform security module facilitating mandatory code signing The new ARM EABI binary model means developers need to retool and the security changes mean they may have to recode S60 platform 3rd Edition phones have Symbian OS 9 1 Sony Ericsson is shipping the M600 and P990 based on Symbian OS 9 1 The earlier versions had a defect where the phone hangs temporarily after the owner sent a large number of SMS es However on 13 September 2006 Nokia released a small program to fix this defect 106 Support for Bluetooth 2 0 was also added Symbian 9 1 introduced capabilities and a Platform Security framework To access certain APIs developers have to sign their application with a digital signature Basic capabilities are user grantable and developers can self sign them while more advanced capabilities require certification and signing via the Symbian Signed program which uses independent test houses and phone manufacturers for approval For example file writing is a user grantable capability while access to Multimedia Device Drivers require phone manufacturer approval A TC TrustCenter ACS Publisher ID certificate is required by the developer for signing applications Symbian OS 9 2 Released Q1 2006 Support for OMA Device Management 1 2 was 1 1 2 Vietnamese language support S60 3rd Edition Feature Pack 1 phones have Symbian OS 9 2 Nokia phones with Symbian OS 9 2 OS include the Nokia E71 Nokia E90 Nokia N95 Nokia N82 Nokia N81 and Nokia 5700 Symbian OS 9 3 Released on 12 July 2006 Upgrades include improved memory management and native support for Wifi 802 11 HSDPA The Nokia E72 Nokia 5730 XpressMusic Nokia N79 Nokia N96 Nokia E52 Nokia E75 Nokia 5320 XpressMusic Sony Ericsson P1 and others feature Symbian OS 9 3 Symbian OS 9 4 Announced in March 2007 Provides the concept of demand paging which is available from v9 3 onwards Applications should launch up to 75 faster Additionally SQL support is provided by SQLite Ships with the Samsung i8910 Omnia HD Nokia N97 Nokia N97 mini Nokia 5800 XpressMusic Nokia 5530 XpressMusic Nokia 5228 Nokia 5230 Nokia 5233 Nokia 5235 Nokia C6 00 Nokia X6 Sony Ericsson Satio Sony Ericsson Vivaz and Sony Ericsson Vivaz Pro Used as the basis for Symbian 1 the first Symbian platform release The release is also better known as S60 5th edition as it is the bundled interface for the OS Symbian 2 Symbian 2 is a version of Symbian that only used by Japanese manufacturers citation needed started selling in Japan market since May 2010 107 The version is not used by Nokia 108 Symbian 3 Symbian OS 9 5 and Symbian Anna Symbian 3 is an improvement over previous S60 5th Edition and features single touch menus in the user interface as well as new Symbian OS kernel with hardware accelerated graphics further improvements will come in the first half of 2011 including portrait qwerty keyboard a new browser and split screen text input Nokia announced that updates to Symbian 3 interface will be delivered gradually as they are available Symbian 4 the previously planned major release is now discontinued and some of its intended features will be incorporated into Symbian 3 in successive releases starting with Symbian Anna Nokia Belle Symbian OS 10 1 In the summer of 2011 videos showing an early leaked version of Symbian Belle original name of Nokia Belle running on a Nokia N8 were published on YouTube 109 On 24 August 2011 Nokia announced it officially for three new smartphones the Nokia 600 later replaced by Nokia 603 Nokia 700 and Nokia 701 110 Nokia officially renamed Symbian Belle to Nokia Belle in a company blog post 111 112 Nokia Belle adds to the Anna improvements with a pull down status notification bar deeper near field communication integration free form re sizable homescreen widgets and six homescreens instead of the previous three As of 7 February 2012 Nokia Belle update is available for most phone models through Nokia Suite coming later to Australia Users can check the availability at the Nokia homepage 113 On 1 March 2012 Nokia announced a Feature Pack 1 update for Nokia Belle which will be available as an update to Nokia 603 700 701 excluding others and for Nokia 808 PureView natively Symbian Carla and Donna were the planned follow up releases to Belle to be released in late 2012 and late 2013 respectively However it was acknowledged in May 2012 that these had been cancelled and that the upcoming Belle Feature Pack 2 would be the last version of the operating system 114 The latest software release for Nokia 1st generation Symbian Belle smartphones Nokia N8 C7 C6 01 Oro 500 X7 E7 E6 is Nokia Belle Refresh 111 040 1511 115 In October 2012 the Nokia Belle Feature Pack 2 widely considered the last major update for Symbian was released for Nokia 603 700 701 and 808 PureView 116 List of devices EditMain article Comparison of Symbian devicesSee also Edit Telephones portalGeneral Edit Bada Nokia Ovi suite Nokia PC Suite software package used to establish an interface between Nokia mobile devices and computers running Microsoft Windows operating system not limited to Symbian Nokia Software Updater Ovi store Nokia s application store on the Internet not limited to SymbianDevelopment related Edit Accredited Symbian Developer Carbide c alternative application and OS development IDE Cleanup stack P I P S Is POSIX on Symbian Python for S60 alternative application development language Qt preferred development tool both for the OS and applications not limited to Symbian Qt Creator IDE Qt Quick QML JavaScript based language MBM file format References Edit Nokia and Accenture Finalize Symbian Software Development and Support Services Outsourcing Agreement Accenture Newsroom newsroom accenture com Lextrait Vincent January 2010 The Programming Languages Beacon v10 0 Archived from the original on 30 May 2012 Retrieved 5 January 2010 Nokia transitions Symbian source to non open license Ars Technica Retrieved 12 June 2014 Lee Williams Symbian on Intel s Atom architecture Archived from the original on 19 April 2009 Retrieved 31 March 2010 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link blog symbian org 16 April 2009 a b Not Open Source just Open for Business symbian nokia com 4 April 2011 Retrieved 23 August 2014 dead link a b c Lunden Ingrid 30 September 2011 Symbian Now Officially No Longer Under The Wing of Nokia 2 300 Jobs Go moconews net Archived from the original on 1 October 2011 Retrieved 30 September 2011 infoSync Interviews Nokia Nseries Executive Infosyncworld com 24 June 2010 Archived from the original on 13 July 2011 Retrieved 12 August 2010 Next generation mobile telecommunications networks Challenges to the Nordic ICT industries 2006 ISBN 9781846630668 UI wars tore Symbian apart Nokia The Register UIQ staff put on notice The Register DailyTech Nokia Offers to Purchase All Symbian Shares for 410M Archived from the original on 21 August 2016 Retrieved 22 May 2016 Symbian Operating System Now Open Source and Free Wired 3 February 2010 Nokia announces Symbian Anna update for N8 E7 C7 and C6 01 first of a series of updates video Engadget Retrieved 3 October 2022 Nokia announces Symbian Belle alongside three new devices Engadget Retrieved 3 October 2022 Nokia reabsorbs Symbian software BBC News 8 November 2010 Symbian is dead Long live Symbian VisionMobile Archived from the original on 23 June 2016 Retrieved 22 May 2016 Nokia s new strategy and structure Symbian to be a franchise platform MeeGo still in long term plans All About MeeGo www allaboutmeego com Archived from the original on 6 September 2013 Retrieved 4 December 2012 a b RIP Symbian Engadget Retrieved 3 October 2022 Nokia moves Symbian to closed licensing 11 April 2011 a b Epstein Zach 23 June 2011 Symbian is officially no longer Nokia s problem BGR Retrieved 3 October 2022 C est la vie Support expectations for Symbian until 2016 unrealistic Tung Liam Nokia says final sayonara to Symbian and MeeGo apps as store freezes updates ZDNet Retrieved 16 February 2015 Techcrunch Nokia Confirms The PureView 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