Mozilla to Develop OS based on android!
Mozilla, who are renowned for their successful internet browser, are entering the mobile race, developing a new web-centric OS that will directly compete with Google, Apple and Microsoft.
Now the company who was underdog to Microsoft looks to be playing the same role, but this time against internet mogul Google.
Announced on the Mozilla discussion forum, Mozilla have begun
coding for phones and tablets. The BBC revealed the mobile operating
system will draw on Android code, with Mozilla writing as much fresh
code as possible. The hybrid-like operating system will be named Boot To
Gecko.
It is an unusual name for an OS, until you remember Gecko is
the rendering engine employed by the Firefox browser that interprets web
page coding and displays it in a screen-friendly format, a homage to
its origins.
Even though Android coding will form the operating system's
foundations, Mozilla hope to add a much more open wrapper around it than
Google currently do, making it more versatile as an operating system.
Its shared foundations will also make Boot To Gecko
compatible with the same phones as Android, competing as a direct
alternative to Google.
Often, when you select a link from an application native to
the Android or iOS market, the operating system will have to open a new
webpage in the browser. Boot To Gecko aims to limit this by making
applications much more web-centric.
If the venture proves successful, Mozilla will be waging war against industry giants, with Google, Apple and Microsoft dominating many facets of the technological world.
Mozilla have acknowledged the project is in infancy and have
chosen to make the development public in hope it will attract talented
enthusiast coders who will contribute to the Boot To Gecko's cause.
According to their project team, all of the code development
will be completed and shared with the public as soon as it is written.
Researcher Andreas Gal, who announced the development, admits
the company has set a high target, but wants to do it "the way we think
open source should be done.
Gal says his ultimate goal is to break "the stranglehold of
proprietary technologies over the mobile device world," implicitly
referring to the practices of Apple, Windows Phone and Google.