S60 Head Lee Williams Nominated As Symbian Foundation Exec

By Dee Chisamera
13:08, October 23rd 2008
57 votes
Vote this story
S60 Head Lee Williams Nominated As Symbian Foundation Exec

Symbian Foundation members have nominated Lee Williams as Executive Director for the foundation, during a meeting held in London this week. Lee is currently head of the S60 organization in Nokia’s Devices business, where he will remain until January 1, 2009 or until the foundation and its leadership are in place and operational.

All ten initial board members (AT&T, LG Electronics, Motorola, Nokia, NTT DOCOMO, Samsung Electronics, Sony Ericsson, ST-NXP Wireless, Texas Instruments and Vodafone) have agreed to the nomination.

The decision should come as no surprise, since Lee has been actively involved in the Symbian project. However, the selection is said to have been extremely rigorous, and as Kris Rinne, Senior Vice President, Architecture and Planning, AT&T, pointed out, Lee is “a strong and experienced leader” and “a driving force in the establishment of the foundation.”

“To me, there can be no more exciting role in the mobile software world than to lead the Symbian Foundation,” said Lee.

In addition to the nomination, the foundation also revealed an increasing support in the Symbian Foundation from 52 companies in the industry. In the first half of 2009, when the foundation is expected to begin operations, even more companies are expected to express their support.

“The Symbian Foundation platform offering will be the most proven and successful open mobile platform,” Rinne said. By June 2010, the platform is expected to become available in open source, a movement that Rinne says will enhance its appeal to developers, solutions providers and network operators all over the world.

The Symbian operating system, released by Symbian Ltd. was specially designed for mobile devices, associating user interface frameworks, reference implementations of tools and libraries. A few month ago, Nokia announced it would spend $410 million for acquiring the Symbian platform, in order to develop a new royalty-free mobile software platform.

The move is expected to increase popularity for the Symbian operating system, and is especially important now, as the iPhone and Android are competing for supremacy on the mobile market.



© 2007 - 2009 - eFluxMedia
dotclear

Other News in

dotclear
Latest videos in Technology
Drink coffee, charge battery
'Le Croupier' brings 3D...
Parking Goes High-Tech
Facebook controversy
Solar power plant goes hybrid

dotclear
Technology You are here: Technology
» Technology   » Gadgets   » Video Games   
E-mail To A Friend Print RSS Text size: Decrease font size Increase font size
dotclear
dotclear
dotclear

Interested In This Topic?

News Alert will keep you informed. Find out more.
dotclear
Photos Gallery
dotclear