Intel and Nokia have launched a joint laboratory that will focus
in part on developing 3D user interfaces for mobile devices.
The center will be part of Intel's European research network,
called Intel Labs Europe, and will be located at the University of
Oulu in Finland, the home country of Nokia. The new lab will be
focused on 3D technology that can make the interaction between
users and mobile devices more immersive, much like today's 3D games
and movies.
"3D technology could change the way we use our mobile devices
and make our experiences with them much more immersive," Rich
Green, senior VP and chief technical officer for Nokia, said in a
statement released Tuesday.
Indeed, one possible area of research is technologies that would
display a 3D hologram of the person being talked to on a
smartphone, the companies said. Such capabilities today are only
found in science fiction movies.
Much of the work will revolve around the MeeGo open source
software platform developed jointly by Intel and Nokia. Hosted by
the Linux Foundation, MeeGo is the merger of Intel's Mobilin
operating system and Nokia's Linux Maemo OS. The companies' goal
with MeeGo is to provide a Linux-based platform that would run
across a variety of devices including smartphones, netbooks, tablet
computers, TVs, and in-vehicle infotainment systems.
Developers would build applications for the platform using the
Qt development environment. The apps would be marketed via Nokia's
Ovi Store and Intel's AppUp Center.
The two companies launched MeeGo this year and it remains to be
seen how well it will compete against the dominant smartphone OSes
today, namely Apple's iOS, Research In Motion's BlackBerry OS, and
Google's Android. Android in the second quarter became the leading
smartphone OS in the United States, toppling the BlackBerry OS,
according to the NPD Group. Android was the OS on 33 percent of all
smartphones sold to U.S. consumers, compared to 28 percent for the
BlackBerry OS and 22 percent for iOS.