Tizen Phone Launches in India [Not a Question]
I am really excited that another non-android OS based phone is being launched today in India - Samsung Launches Its First Tizen-Powered Phone, The Z1, In India For $92. (See phone specs and features; another interesting read here - Samsung's plan for Tizen). Two suggestions for Jolla:
- Port Sailfish OS to the Z1. Tizen buyers will be mobile users who are looking for non-android OS and so the ideal target customers for Jolla too. And they may not hesitate to experiment with Sailfish OS on their Z1.
- The Tizen ecosystem, like Sailfish OS's, is still in its infacy. But since a giant like Samsung is behind it, mobile developers will pay serious attention to it. As such, the Jolla team should try to target Tizen's developers and motivate them to create apps for Sailfish OS too. (Samsung has also made a bold decision in NOT providing "android compatibility" - thus, only native apps will run on Tizen!).
I hope this competitive pressure will bring forth the best in the Jolla team, and you continue to innovate and make smarter business decisions.
Update - Samsung Tizen store already has 1000+ apps including popular in-demand ones like Facebook, YouTube, Whatsapp etc. On another note, Jolla should also take note of how Samsung kept local needs in mind when launching the phone - e.g., dual-sim feature which are quite popular in India and China.
Update 2: Hands-on reviews are coming in and they all say that Tizen runs smooth on its 'underwhelming' hardware. One of the reviews mentioned that Whatsapp runs on a 'compatibility layer', so it appears to be in contradiction to Samsung's claim that the Z1 won't support Android apps.
In our use, we did not experience any lag or stutter while navigating between the home screens, app launcher pages and opening and switching between apps. Although the phone may seem to be underpowered judging merely by specifications, we feel that Samsung has optimized the OS to run smoothly on the phone ... We also spotted WhatsApp messenger which is an ACL (Application Compatibilty Layer) app. This means that the phone will be able to run select Android apps using emulation. - First impressions: Samsung Z1, the first Tizen smartphone
Z1 and Tizen is Samsung’s alternative to the dominance of Google. And yet you feel that by keeping this as a budget phone with bare minimum specs, Samsung hasn’t really given the Z1 the backing it needs. There’s no doubt that it’s a pretty zippy OS given how smoothly it functioned for us in the demo zone, but the lack of apps and features on the phone don’t really do it much justice. - Tizen Z1 first impressions: Samsung smartphone aimed at first-time buyers
Update 3 - Samsung reports sales of 50,000+ Z1 so far; will be making the phones in India; have decided to launch it next in Bangladesh.
Update 4 - Launched in Bangladesh; 20,000 Z1 sold in the first week.
Maybe not on the device port front, but with Tizen being a Linux/Wayland/SystemD/Qt/Ofono/Connman based operating system, we may be able to easily port any open source Tizen native apps to SailfishOS.
r0kk3rz ( 2015-01-15 13:24:59 +0200 )edit"Samsung has also made a bold decision in NOT providing "android compatibility" - thus, only native apps will run on Tizen! "
Not true. Tizen (at least on the Z1) comes with OpenMobile's ACL specifically to allow Android apps to run because of the dearth of native Tizen apps. (well, looks like you have to download it actually)
strongm ( 2015-01-15 15:22:45 +0200 )edit@strongm - From the article I linked to, Samsung seems to have made it pretty clear that the phone will not have any such 'android support' or 'android layer' pre-built. And I am guessing you will be able to install only from the official 'app store' ... so, NO, android support will not be available.
sifartech ( 2015-01-15 19:03:46 +0200 )editLooked breifly at the tizen SDK, eclipse based, ugh. And the OS itself looks like shite to me. Sailfish looks much better, more thought through and has an SDK/IDE that is totally awesome. Qt with Qt-Creator is absolutely unbeatable. I don't see any future in that Samsung crap, they start out with a low-end device that is much less capable than the Jolla 1. Only thing that was good about it was the dual sim.
Larswad ( 2015-01-19 12:42:37 +0200 )edit@Larswad - The development environment might not appeal to you out of your personal preference. I get that. The rest of what you said is however out of ignorance. You say the same thing what my friends tell about my Jolla when they compare the specs with their phone. Naturally, the Jolla does pale in comparison to the latest quad-core or octa-core phones of today. But Sailfish runs great and smooth on the provided hardware, so from a user experience point of view it doesn't matter. The Tizen too runs great on the Z1 hardware. Secondly, the target market of India and China is over 100+ million mobile users (and that's a conservative estimate). And not everyone can afford a US$100+ phone. The hardware of Z1 at that price (<$100) isn't bad. Now, if the Z1 manages to sell to even 0.5% of the 100+ million target base (in India and China), they would not only make a profit but have a user base of 500,000+ Tizen users on the Z1. That's a good strategy ...
sifartech ( 2015-01-19 18:32:11 +0200 )edit