After confirming that users of Samsung Wave mobile phones "" that work with Bada OS "" will move to the new Tizen ecosystem, the South Korean firm is taking new steps to make its new platform an environment that has enough support to make it attractive to the public. Their main efforts are deposited in Android and the Galaxy family, but they do not rule out plans B that help to boost the Korean giant's machinery, thus striving to obtain support so that Tizen becomes a system that has enough interest to certain users.
Along these lines, as we have learned through the Japanese medium MSN Sankei News, two Japanese manufacturers of mobile terminals have signed with Samsung their entry into the portfolio of companies that are dedicated to developing devices that work with Tizen. We refer to Fujitsu and NEC, a couple of companies that enjoy no popularity in the field of smartphones in our country, but that in Japanthey are much better considered. Thus, Samsung's strategy would go through strengthening ties with certain manufacturers that have a good presence in regional markets with a view to becoming present as an alternative in a segment, that of operating systems for smartphones, which this year will experience a particularly generous period in as far as offer is concerned.
The mobiles that the aforementioned firms would manufacture would be available as of 2014 through the Japanese operator NTT DoCoMo, the first telephone service operator in the Asian country, which would also give a certain boost to the expansion of Tizen in the region. And it is that NTT DoCoMo holds a seat on the board of directors of the body that designs the strategy of said operating system through the Tizen Association, a body sponsored by Samsung but in which operators and manufacturers such as Vodafone, Orange, Sprint are also present , SK Telecom, KT, Panasonic, Huawei and Intel.
Weeks ago we knew that Tizen would have opted for simplicity in the platform's interface design, based on smooth lines and rounded icons that refer to the latest graphic proposals from Nokia Belle, Nokia's native system that reached its zenith with the Nokia 808 PureView. Thanks to the captures that were exposed, it was possible to know that the platform is designed following a series of needs especially oriented to user satisfaction. In this sense, the integrated web browser achieves excellent results in the tests dedicated to HTML5. It would also have been known that phones that work with this system will be equipped with sensorNFC.
The first mobiles with the Tizen operating system would be available from this year, although there are still no specific dates for the launch of the first equipment to arrive with the aforementioned platform. Nor is it known in detail how the devices will be used to release the operating system that the guys from the South Korean multinational have designed in tandem with the North American Intel.