Editorial gg continues to monitor the development of the operating system MeeGo, Nokia and Intel announced during the exhibition MWC 2010. Nokia itself puts great hopes on it, but until the process is slow and somewhat resembles the situation with Windows Phone 7. That is, information noise, like, there's a sense (at least not yet) no. Release version 2.1 is now available for developers with a beta version of SDK.
Screenshots for netbooks do not differ from those that we saw back in the summer, so bring them here does not make sense. Innovations have touched smartphones - the developers say the new elements for the calls, send SMS, web browser, connectivity management, music and video playback, and viewing photos.
MeeGo version 1.1 contains the kernel of Linux 2.6.35, X.org server version 1.9.0, Web Runtime, Qt 4.7 and Qt Mobility 1.0.2. New screenshots have appeared for navigators, or In-Vehicle Infotainment (IVI) - title can be translated as automotive devices to access information and entertainment resources. In fact this is exactly navigators with the ability to connect to the Internet, play music and videos, view pictures (possibly video).
The 1.1 Core OS provides a complete set of enabling technologies for mobile computing. The MeeGo stack contains Linux Kernel,, Web Runtime, Qt 4.7 and Qt Mobility 1.0.2 supporting the contacts, location, messaging, multimedia, sensor and service frameworks. It also includes a number of leading edge components such as the oFono telephony stack, the ConnMan connection manager, the Tracker data indexer, the Telepathy real-time communications framework, the Buteo sync framework and many more.
The next version 2.2 should appear in April 2011 and include a complete (hopefully) a set of applications for phones. Maybe by this time should expect announcements (unlikely sales) of the first devices to MeeGo.
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