Chemistry, asked by sushmaabhinavanjalis, 4 months ago

operating system of Nokia is​

Answers

Answered by riya15955
3

Answer:

The Nokia Asha platform is a mobile operating system (OS) and computing platform designed for low-end borderline smartphones, based on software from Smarterphone which was acquired by Nokia. The platform inherits UI similarities mostly from MeeGo "Harmattan", and replaces Series 40 on Nokia's low-end devices.

Answered by cricketmasti16
1

Answer:

NOS ( NOKIAOS)

Explanation:

Initially Nokia phones came with “NOS” (NokiaOS).

The original NOS was a very simple operating system, and did not have much support for storage, for example all text messages and contacts were stored on the SIM card.

1996 Nokia released Nokia 9000 communicator, which which used an OS called GEOS on the “computer” side; It also had a phone side which used NOS. On the computer side, 9000 used an embedded version of Intel 386 as the CPU. Later 9110 used same OS but AMD 486 CPU instead.

Then in 1999 , in Nokia 7110, came NOS/ISA (Intelligent System Architecture) which was much more advanced (and somewhat more bloated) than the original NOS. It added storage features so that contacts and text messages could be stored on the device, but it was also slower. I bought a Nokia 8210 which used the old NOS instead of 7110 because the 8210 felt so much snappier.

In 2000 came Nokia 9000 communicator, which had SymbianOS (which was based on the EPOC32 from Psion) instead of GEOS. And then 2001 came 7650 and after that lots of symbian phones; SymbianOS became the operating system of Nokias smartphones.

Internally Nokia started experimenting with Linux quite early, and created a Linux distribution called “Maemo” which was much later (2009) used in n900 phone. it’s predecessors, tablet n800 and n810 lacked phone functionality, because SymbianOS was Nokias holy cow and they did not want anything to disturb its position(a huge mistake; SymbianOS was a quite bad operating system).

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