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The N8 runs Symbian^3. At first glance it looks very similar to S60 5th Edition, but this under appreciates the changes that have been made. The most notable is the switch to a single tap interaction model (rather than double tap). Both methods are valid, but single tap seems to be what people expect to have on a modern smartphone.
At the Symbian Foundation stand visitors could write down their ideas and wishes for future features and apps. Apparently they will all be fed into the new ideas.symbian.org/ site.
Bounce - cellphone game for first color Nokia s40 phones. Later there was version for s60 Symbian phones too. I really like this game and I decided to make maps for original (extended) level pack.
...well, actually a Nokia N810 tablet. Thanks to VMWare's virtualisation software both Symbian OS 9.4 (with the Techview shell) and Android were running simultaenously. You could switch from one to the other using the screen shown in the photo.
The world's first toaster that runs the open-source Symbian^2 operating system. See the announcement on the Symbian Foundation blog for more details.
Many thanks to John Bell for providing the toaster photo under a Creative Commons license.
A wall of of Symbian OS based phones on Symbian's stand.
Starting from the top left we have: Nokia N82, Sony Ericsson P1, Mitsubishi DoCoMo D905i, Nokia E51, Samsung i550, Sony Ericsson DoCoMo SO905i, Motorola Z8, Samsung i450, Nokia N82, Sharp DoCoMo SH905i, Samsung i560, Nokia N95 8GB, Motorola Z10, Fujitsu DoCoMo F905i, Nokia 6210 Classic and the Sony Ericsson W960.
Although its not immediately apparent in this picture the screen of the P1 seems (subjectively) to have improved over the M600. It feels brighter and a little crisper.
David Wood gives his "Practical Tips for Profitable Growth in the Symbian Ecosystem" presentation in the Berlage Zaal at SEE2010.
This Nokia 700 smartphone with the Nokia Belle (Symbian) operating system has replaced my Nokia 6110 Navigator since the end of november 2011.
It also has built-in navigation hardware and the entirely free Nokia Maps software, complete with offline maps. Using a smartphone for navigation purposes remains a perfect solution while driving a motorcycle, and this Nokia does a great job. Not only navigating by the way, it has all features and possibilities you could wish for in a smartphone, and for a small price!
(location info has been blurred in the photo for obvious reasons of privacy)