Monday, June 05, 2006

Qualcomm to integrate Windows Mobile in chips

ARNnet reports that Qualcomm (QCOM) and Microsoft (MSFT) "will work together to port the Windows Mobile operating system to certain Qualcomm chips, speeding time to market and potentially dropping the price of smart phones. By integrating and testing support for Windows Mobile on Qualcomm's Mobile Station Modem chips, the companies hope to help device makers speed product development times."

Carolina Milanesi at Gartner opined that "the support could also help lower costs for device makers. Handset manufacturers that use the integrated chips won't have to buy a separate application processor." She said, "That will have an implication on the building material cost and it will drop that cost down."

The collaboration is also likely to help Windows Mobile win inroads into markets like North America and parts of Asia where CDMA (Code Division Multiple Access) has a foothold, she said. CDMA is the mobile telecommunications technology developed by Qualcomm.

According to the article, the "collaboration will help extend the battery life of devices running the integrated chips. The chips are expected to become available to handset makers in the second half of this year and should hit shelves in 2007."