If you’re buying a new smartphone, the
chances are you’re looking at an iPhone or a rival running Android – or if
you’re feeling adventurous, maybe Windows Phone. When it comes to picking your
platform it doesn’t seem like you’re spoiled for choice, but that’s all about
to change. 2013 is the year we’re set to see plenty of rivals emerge, each with
their own unique skills. Read on to find out all about them.
Firefox OS
Firefox OS is a radically different take on smartphone
software: like Chrome OS on a laptop, the entire experience is a web browser –
apps, the dialer, games, everything. That means you’ll never have to update
your phone, and better yet, it means they’ll be cheap to make as well.
Mozilla’s finally revealed the very first phones running Firefox OS today
(pictured above), in partnership with Telefonica and Geeksfone. They don’t have
a launch date yet, but Mozilla says they’ll come with an impressive price tag.
BlackBerry 10
Of all the new rivals, RIM is the one Apple
and Google must fear most: the BlackBerry maker once lead the way with
smartphones, and its new BlackBerry 10 platform looks seriously polished, and
will launch with thousands of apps on day one. You already know
what to expect: solid email and an easy typing experience. What we don’t know
is how good the hardware will be: can the first BlackBerry 10 phones match the
iPhone 5 for scorching beauty, or the Samsung Galaxy Note 2 for brute hardware?
We’ll find out when BlackBerry 10 launche son 30 January.
Ubuntu for mobile
Ubuntu, the popular version of free Windows
rival Linux, is also going mobile. Announced earlier this month, Ubuntu for phones will stand out with a clever docking mode,
so it can power a full fat PC mode and PC apps when you drop it into an
accessory or monitor. Sadly, there’s no word on any hardware partners yet, but
watch this space.
The Kindle Fire Phone
This one’s unconfirmed, but rumours are
flying that Amazon is working on a phone to go with its Kindle Fire tablets. If
it did, you can expect it to be loosely based on Android, with support for all
your favourite apps, but tied into Amazon’s core services like its Kindle
download store and Lovefilm for movie streaming. The ebook giant has already
inked a deal with Nokia to provide maps for the Kindle Fire tablet, so this
seems like the next logical step, and as we’ve pointed out, a Kindle Fire phone
could be revolutionary.
The Facebook Phone
Last but not least, Facebook is rumoured to be prepping
its own platform for mobiles too. Though the social network is being tight
lipped, if it were to go down this route, you can bet it too would be based on
open-source Android, with all Google’s services ripped out and replaced. You
only have to look at Facebook’s Messenger app for iPhone and Android to see
what it could offer. [GadgetShow]
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