Hello Everyone, I am Rutik, today I am giving you the information about Mobile Operating Systems & Their Types. If you like this information, please share it with your friends. Leave me a comment to improve my writing skills and subscribe by email for future updates.
A mobile operating system (OS) is software that allows smartphones, tablet PCs, and other devices to run applications and programs.
A mobile OS typically starts up when a device powers on, presenting a screen with icons or tiles that present information and provide application access. Mobile operating systems also manage cellular and wireless network connectivity, as well as phone access.
What is Mobile Operating System (OS)?
Much like the Linux or Windows operating system controls your desktop or laptop computer, a mobile operating system is the software platform on top of which other programs can run on mobile devices. The operating system is responsible for determining the functions and features available on your devices, such as thumbwheel, keyboards, WAP, synchronization with applications, email, text messaging, and more. The mobile OS will also determine which third-party applications (mobile apps) can be used on your device.
Types of mobile operating systems
There are numerous mobile device operating systems available today, and two of the most widely adopted are the iPhone's OS, Apple iOS, and Google's open-source OS, Google Android. These two mobile OSes take different approaches to the mobile operating system.
Let's see some Popular Operating systems (OS)
1. Andriod OS (Google INC.)
The Android mobile operating system is Google’s open and free software stack that includes an operating system, middleware, and also key applications for use on mobile devices, including smartphones. Updates for the open-source Android mobile operating system have been developed under “dessert-inspired” version names (Cupcake, Donut, Eclair, Gingerbread, Honeycomb, Ice Cream Sandwich) with each new version arriving in alphabetical order with new enhancements and improvements.
2. iPhone / IOS (Apple INC.)
Apple’s iPhone OS was originally developed for use on its iPhone devices. Now, the mobile operating system is referred to as iOS and is supported on a number of Apple devices including the iPhone, iPad, iPad 2, and iPod Touch. The iOS mobile operating system is available only on Apple’s own manufactured devices as the company does not license the OS for third-party hardware. Apple iOS is derived from Apple’s Mac OS X operating system.
3. Windows Mobile (Microsoft INC.)
Windows Mobile is Microsoft’s mobile operating system used in smartphones and mobile devices with or without touchscreens. The Mobile OS is based on the Windows CE 5.2 kernel. In 2010 Microsoft announced a new smartphone platform called Windows Phone 7.
4. Bada (Samsung Electronics)
Bada is a proprietary Samsung mobile OS that was first launched in 2010. The Samsung Wave was the first smartphone to use this mobile OS. Bada provides mobile features such as multipoint-touch, 3D graphics, and of course, application downloads and installation.
5. Blackberry OS (Research in Motion)
The BlackBerry OS is a proprietary mobile operating system developed by Research In Motion for use on the company s popular BlackBerry handheld devices. The BlackBerry platform is popular with corporate users as it offers synchronization with Microsoft Exchange, Lotus Domino, Novell GroupWise email, and other business software, when used with the BlackBerry Enterprise Server.
6. WEB OS (Palm / HP)
WEBOS is a mobile operating system that runs on the Linux kernel. WebOS was initially developed by Palm as the successor to its Palm OS mobile operating system. It is a proprietary Mobile OS that was eventually acquired by HP and is now referred to as webOS (lower-case w) in HP literature. HP uses webOS in a number of devices including several smartphones and HP TouchPads. HP has pushed its webOS into the enterprise mobile market by focusing on improving security features and management with the release of webOS 3.x. HP has also announced plans for a version of webOS to run within the Microsoft Windows operating system and to be installed on all HP desktop and notebook computers in 2012.
7. Meego OS (Nokia and Intel)
A joint open-source mobile operating system is the result of merging two products based on open source technologies: Maemo (Nokia) and Moblin (Intel). MeeGo is a mobile OS designed to work on a number of devices including smartphones, netbooks, tablets, in-vehicle information systems, and various devices using Intel Atom and ARMv7 architectures.
8. Symbian OS (Nokia)
Symbian is a mobile operating system (OS) targeted at mobile phones that offers a high level of integration with communication and personal information management (PIM) functionality. Symbian OS combines middleware with wireless communications through an integrated mailbox and the integration of Java and PIM functionality (agenda and contacts). Nokia has made the Symbian platform available under an alternative, open and direct model, to work with some OEMs and the small community of platform development collaborators. Nokia does not maintain Symbian as an open-source development project.
9. Palm OS (Garnet OS)
The Palm OS is a proprietary mobile operating system (PDA operating system) that was originally released in 1996 on the Pilot 1000 handheld. Newer versions of the Palm OS have added support for expansion ports, new processors, external memory cards, improved security, and support for ARM processors and smartphones. Palm OS 5 was extended to provide support for a broad range of screen resolutions, wireless connections, and enhanced multimedia capabilities and is called Garnet OS.
There is no expert who can remain an expert without sharing their knowledge. So, keep sharing your knowledge with everyone.