Symbian developer plans to bring iPhone’s sexy to Symbian’s back

Software

Despite the fact that Symbian has gotten pretty gray up top over the past few years, it is still the world’s most popular smartphone operating system by a huge margin. S60 is incredibly capable and versatile, and Nokia has consistently pumped out solid hardware to carry it. That being said, it is hardly the most exciting mobile OS on the block these days and there are plenty of areas where S60 could use a solid adrenaline shot. Chris Woods of Mind-Flip, creator of the popular TextQuick app for S60 handsets, has targeted one such area and plans to use a bit of iPhone trickery in an effort to create a better user experience. We all know Apple can be a bit sneaky at times and one such example is the manner in which apps are launched. Mobile processors can only do so much in the age of the app, and finding a way to fill the time gap between launching an application and being able to use an application is something that Apple addressed well with the iPhone.

When the user taps an icon, the iPhone immediately zooms in to a JPEG that resembles the running application. While the handset is zooming in it is also launching the actual application in the background, the theory being that the app will be alive and ready to rock by the time the JPEG zoom animation is complete. Sure some apps take longer to load than others but by using this system, Apple is able to minimize the amount of time the user is staring at a screen while nothing is happening. S60 users are very familiar with this ‘empty’ time – click on an app to launch it and more often than not you’ll be staring at a motionless display for 1-3+ seconds before anything at all happens. It will be interesting to follow Woods’ efforts as he attempts to apply this concept to S60 in a project dubbed Venus, as the Symbian OS is certainly not going to make this an easy task for him.

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5 Comments
  • http://3lib.ukonline.co.uk/ Steve Litchfield

    Sorry, waste of time. This is a problem that doesn’t exist. S60/Symbian is *fully* multi-tasking. Apps appear INSTANTLY when selected. Or they should, after a short delay just the very first time after booting.

    The only fly in the ointment is that novice users insist on closing apps down just to get back to the menu and switch to something else – but that’s a user training issue that Nokia’s getting better at. It doesn’t really need an extra UI layer or utility to get involved…..

  • http://palfrei.blogspot.com Palfrei

    I ‘ve actually been thinking about this trick for a while and it seems that my gut was right. Lags are impossible to avoid because no computational system remains the same for a long time, a fact that alters their responsiveness speed.

    If apple people thought about it and if I thought about it, why neither Microsoft, nor Palm nor Symbian people came with this idea?

    I have to say that they have a bunch of really creative designers and ingeneers at Apple. Being as it is, despite how amazing it looks I think the iPhone is a castrated device that doesn’t offer things that my 4 y/o sgh-e376 does and I can’t understand why developers are having such a hard time creating a competitive device.

  • jp

    been using s60 for years, since the 7610b and, contrary to Steve’s comment about, this would be much welcomed by most….as long as it doesn’t adversely affect performance in any way.

    Opening games from the N-Gage platform is even worse. S60 needs a lot of refining

  • http://www.bgr.com Zach Epstein

    Steve Litchfield – I definitely agree with you to an extent but addressing the issue with a solution as described would serve the greater good compared with adjusting user habits. Many newer S60 handsets certainly add an abundance of free memory that will accommodate a large number of minimized apps but many are still lacking in that department. Beyond that, memory leaks are a huge issue with more apps than I can count. Leaving a leaky app open in the background will lead to tons of errors and bogging that the typical user will not simply shrug off as the power user does. Also, battery life can be drastically affected by leaving apps open instead of exiting them. Lastly, as was touched upon above, the more cumbersome apps that take the longest to load can’t or shouldn’t be left open. N-gage games, nav apps like Garmin, etc. Woods’ solution would have a big impact on the user experience in a positive way and as such, I’m all for it.

  • Manuel

    why wouldn’t symbian make it easy for him?

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