Tizen Association

Tizen Association
Formation January 2007 (2007-01)
Type Not for profit consortium
Website www.tizenassociation.org
Formerly called
The Linux Mobile (LiMo) Foundation

The Tizen Association (Formerly The LiMo (Linux Mobile) Foundation) is a non-profit technology consortium organization dedicated to creating Tizen as the first truly open, hardware-independent, Linux-based mobile operating system for smartphone mobile devices. The mission of the LiMo Foundation is to create an open, Linux-based software platform for use by industry to produce mobile devices through a balanced and transparent contribution process, enabling a ecosystem of differentiated products, applications and services. The governance is "open and transparent": leadership and decision making are shared. The founding members were Motorola, NEC, NTT DoCoMo, Panasonic Mobile Communications, Samsung Electronics, and Vodafone. The work result was the LiMo Platform. The work was integrated into mobile phone products from NEC, Panasonic and Samsung and later combined in the Tizen platform.

Members

Members of the Tizen Association are:

Founding and Core Members Associate Members

Founding members

Core members

Phones

Phones using LiMo include:

Samsung NEC Panasonic
  • Vodafone 360 H1
  • Vodafone 360 M1
  • Samsung SCH-M510
  • docomo PRIME seriesTM N-01A
  • docomo STYLE seriesTM N-02A
  • docomo STYLE seriesTM N-03A
  • docomo SMART seriesTM N-04A
  • docomo PRIME seriesTM N-06A
  • docomo PRIME seriesTM N-07A
  • docomo STYLE seriesTM N-08A
  • docomo SMART seriesTM N-09A
  • docomo STYLE seriesTM N-01B
  • docomo PRIME seriesTM N-02B
  • docomo STYLE seriesTM N-03B
  • docomo PRIME seriesTM N-04B
  • docomo STYLE seriesTM N-05B
  • docomo STYLE seriesTM N-06B
  • docomo SMART seriesTM N-07B
  • docomo PRO seriesTM N-08B
  • docomo STYLE seriesTM N-01C
  • docomo STYLE seriesTM N-02C
  • docomo PRIME seriesTM N-03C
  • N706ie
  • N905iμ
  • N705i
  • N905i
  • docomo PRIME seriesTM P-01A
  • docomo STYLE seriesTM P-02A
  • docomo STYLE seriesTM P-03A
  • docomo SMART seriesTM P-04A
  • docomo SMART seriesTM P-05A
  • docomo STYLE seriesTM P-06A
  • docomo PRIME seriesTM P-07A
  • docomo STYLE seriesTM P-08A
  • docomo SMART seriesTM P-09A
  • docomo STYLE seriesTM P-10A
  • docomo PRIME seriesTM P-01B
  • docomo STYLE seriesTM P-02B
  • docomo SMART seriesTM P-03B
  • docomo PRIME seriesTM P-04B
  • docomo STYLE seriesTM P-05B
  • docomo STYLE seriesTM P-06B
  • docomo STYLE seriesTM P-07B
  • docomo SMART seriesTM P-01C
  • docomo STYLE seriesTM P-02C
  • docomo PRIME seriesTM P-03C
  • P706ie
  • P705i
  • P905i
  • P905iTV
  • P906I

LiMo & Tizen

In the end of September 2011 it was announced by the Linux Foundation that MeeGo will be totally replaced by the Tizen mobile operating system project during 2012. Tizen will be a new free and open source Linux-based operating-system which itself will not be released until the first quarter of 2012. Intel and Samsung, in collaboration with the LiMo Foundation and assisting MeeGo developers, have been pointed out to lead the development of this new software platform, using third-party developer frameworks that will primarily be built on the HTML5 and other web standards.[1][2][3][4][5][6] As of October 2012, the LiMo website traffic is redirected to tizen.org.

See also

Preceded by
LiMo Foundation
Tizen Association
2016
Succeeded by
None

References

  1. https://www.engadget.com/2011/09/28/meego-to-be-folded-into-linux-based-tizen-os-slated-to-arrive-i/ MeeGo to be folded into Linux-based Tizen OS, slated to arrive in 2012
  2. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2011-09-30. Retrieved 2011-12-18. MeeGo is dead: Meet Tizen, another new open source OS based on Linux
  3. https://meego.com/community/blogs/imad/2011/whats-next-meego What's Next for MeeGo
  4. https://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=news_item&px=OTk1Mg Tizen Is Announced; MeeGo Will Transition To It
  5. http://www.tizen.org Tizen Official Website
  6. Paul, Ryan. "MeeGo rebooted as Intel and Samsung launch new Tizen platform". Ars Technica. Retrieved 28 September 2011.


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