![]() It’ll receive some prettification, but Nokia’s focus is Windows Phone 7. Is this bad? Well, kind of – I mean, Symbian is on life support from now on. “Through these pages we are releasing source code to these collaborators, but are not maintaining Symbian as an open source development project,” Nokia further clarifies, “Consistent with this, the Nokia Symbian License is an alternative license which provides an access to Nokia’s additional Symbian development for parties which collaborate with Nokia on the Symbian platform.” “We have received questions about the use of words ‘open’, ‘open source’, and about having a registration process before allowing access to the code,” Nokia writes, “As we have consistently said, Nokia is making the Symbian platform available under an alternative, open and direct model, to enable us to continue working with the remaining Japanese OEMs and the relatively small community of platform development collaborators we are already working with.” ![]() They’re not open as in open source, but open as in open for business. We said in a short item that the source code to Symbian had been published online by Nokia, but this is, in fact, not exactly the case. We’ve got a little correction to make – although this time, it’s kind of Nokia’s fault for an ambiguous choice of words.
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