
RCR Wireless News 16-12-2008
LiMo Foundation Executive Director Morgan Gillis examines and discusses new mobile business opportunities rising from recent changes in the socio-economic environment. Full Article

eWeek 11-12-2008
Vodafone's membership in the Google-led Open Handset Alliance isn't necessarily a bad thing for the LiMo Foundation, which makes an open-source mobile operating system based on Linux that some see as vying for smartphone supremacy with Google's Android mobile and wireless stack. LiMo's Morgan Gillis says overlap among Android, LiMo and Symbian camps is par for the course as they combat Windows Mobile, RIM and the Apple iPhone. Full Article

Mobilizedtv 03-12-2008
Does Linux have a bright future in the mobile ecosystem? If you’re Andrew Shikiar, the director of global marketing for the LiMo Foundation, the answer is an emphatic yes. In this interview, he meets with MobilizedTV to talk about the foundation’s work and the future of Linux in the mobile ecosystem. Full Article

RCR Wireless News 14-10-2008
Proactive approach counteracts ‘dumb pipe’ Full Article

Forbes 23-09-2008
You don't have to be a Google booster to realize the Tuesday launch of the Internet king's Android platform may alter the mobile landscape. Full Article

Associated Press 22-09-2008
Google Inc.'s announcement last year that it would give away software that could run cell phones was met by dizzy accolades from analysts who thought it would let the search engine company conquer the world of mobile advertising. Full Article

RCR Wireless News 19-08-2008
The mobile communications industry is turning the page on its history of proprietary, closed development. Today, mobile is writing its next chapter, and here’s where open development is moving the story. Full Article

The Washington Post 05-08-2008
Motorola announced three new Rokr handsets today, one of which is based on the LiMo Foundation's Linux operating system. Full Article

Forbes 04-08-2008
While Google has been fairly quiet about how its mobile platform, Android, is shaping up, its chief rival is trumpeting its progress. Full Article

CIO Magazine 04-08-2008
The LiMo Foundation plans to announce new members on Monday, including one that is sharing code for developing mobile Web applications, in what the group says is an indication that its Linux mobile-phone platform is maturing. Full Article

New York Times 04-08-2008
The LiMo Foundation, a consortium of wireless-related companies seeking to create an open operating system for cellphones and other wireless devices, has introduced seven new handsets based upon the Linux operating system, bringing the total to 21. Full Article

Telecoms.com 04-08-2008
Mobile Linux collective, the LiMo Foundation, announced a raft of new handsets to ship with the operating system on Monday. Full Article

CNET Crave Blog 04-08-2008
Seven new mobile phones have passed the LiMo Foundation's certification process, and the group has a few new members to welcome aboard. Full Article

eWeek 04-08-2008
The LiMo Foundation reveals the next swath of its Linux-based smart phones, which are designed to help users access the Internet from anywhere on the go. The new phones apply additional pressure on Google's mobile and wireless plans to bring phones based on its Android mobile operating system to the market. Full Article

eWeek 04-08-2008
Mobile phone vendors Motorola, NEC and Panasonic have unveiled seven Linux-based smart phones for the LiMo Foundation. Review a sneak peek of all seven LiMo Linux smart phones in this eWEEK slide show. Full Article

Conde Nast Portfolio 04-08-2008
Blaise Zerega says pull up to the bumper, baby. Sure the iPhone is all the rage, and the media keeps hyping the Google's android, but the smart money is on the LiMo phones. Full Article

InternetNews.com 04-08-2008
With its open source and proprietary rivals proliferating and shoring up their positions, the Linux-based LiMo Foundation is pulling out all the stops in its bid to establish itself as the preeminent mobile platform. Full Article

BusinessWeek 31-07-2008
The field is crowded with efforts to build open source software for cell phones; the players would get more mileage—and better compete with Apple and Microsoft—by working together. Full Article

RCR Wireless News 15-07-2008
A race is underway, and the whole world is watching — even though the winners have already been determined. Full Article

Telephony Online 14-07-2008
Podcast: Senior Editor Kevin Fitchard discusses the open-source mobile operating system with LiMo Foundation executive director Morgan Gillis. Full Article

San Jose Mercury News 05-07-2008
Making good software for mobile phones is hard - even for a technically adept company like Google. Full Article

Forbes 27-06-2008
Forget the iPhone. The real battle in the mobile industry is over open-source software. Full Article

BusinessWeek 27-06-2008
Standardization will be put on hold as LiPs and LiMo join forces. LiPs wanted to create a formal Linux standard, while LiMo wanted shared implementation Full Article

GigaOM 24-06-2008
Nokia, already a stakeholder in mobile OS maker Symbian, has announced that it will buy the remainder of the company and throw all the assets into a new platform called the Symbian Foundation, which will unite all the flavors of Symbian into a single, common software platform that will go open source in two years. Full Article

Wireless Business & Technology 13-06-2008
Collaborative source provides a unique opportunity. Full Article

BusinessWeek 12-06-2008
Amid high demand for Firefox 3, Mozilla prepares its open-source software to take on Microsoft, Google, and a world of cell-phone confusion. Full Article

Linux Insider 10-06-2008
Silos and walled gardens are giving way to collabetition in the mobile handset industry. Faced with customer demands to innovate at nearly light speed, mobile handset makers are discovering that collaborating and using open source software can help them develop products faster, writes Morgan Gillis, executive director of the LiMo Foundation. Full Article

InternetNews 19-05-2008
In backing the LiMo Foundation, a two-year old global Linux consortium, Verizon Wireless is doing much more than choosing sides on the battlefield of mobile operating system development. Full Article

BusinessWeek 15-05-2008
The cellular giant is throwing its weight behind the Linux-based LiMo operating system, instead of Google's Android, for its mobile phones Full Article

Ars Technica 15-05-2008
Mobile carrier Verizon Wireless has joined the Linux Mobile (LiMo) Foundation and has announced plans to adopt the open source software platform. Linux-based phones will be available from Verizon next year, alongside other devices that run competing proprietary operating systems. Full Article

Engadget 14-05-2008
Following a new round of partnership announcements back in February, LiMo Foundation today added 8 new members, bringing the grand total to 40 -- and perhaps most notably, Verizon Wireless becomes the first American carrier to team up with the group and the Foundation's final board member. Full Article

Gizmodo 14-05-2008
It looks like Verizon Wireless is super duper committed to open development, because they've just joined the LiMo Foundation board of directors. Full Article

Associated Press 14-05-2008
NEW YORK - Verizon Wireless is backing a free operating system that competes with programs from Microsoft Corp., Google Inc. and Qualcomm Inc. and expects it to become the "preferred" software on its network. Full Article

Forbes 14-05-2008
Less than a year old, Google's Android is often pictured as the golden child of the open-source mobile platforms. But the LiMo Foundation, Android's chief competitor in the mobile open-source community, is stepping up its game. Full Article

ZDNet UK 14-05-2008
The LiMo Foundation, a broad industry consortium of manufacturers, operators and software developers working to put Linux onto the mobile phone, is to launch a major enterprise push later this year. Full Article

Washington Post 14-05-2008
Verizon Wireless (NYSE: VZ) confirmed today that it will support the Linux mobile-phone operating system, and join the LiMo Foundation as a core member, signaling its commitment to the platform. Full Article

Wireless Week 23-04-2008
Until recently, mobile communications was largely closed. Operating systems and content were operator-specific, creating “walled gardens” that ultimately stifled innovation. In this article, LiMo Foundation Executive Director discusses how Mobile Linux is unlocking innovation. Full Article

CIO Today 01-04-2008
The LiMo Foundation has released the first version of its open-source LiMo platform for mobile devices. LiMo will challenge Google's Android and Apple, Inc.'s software development kit for Apple's iPhone. Texas Instruments is the latest industry giant to join the LiMo Foundation, which already includes mobile-communications giants. Full Article

USA Today 24-03-2008
AT&T and Verizon Wireless lately have embraced the idea of giving consumers greater control over the wireless devices and applications they use, such as e-mail, downloading and picture-sharing. Full Article

LinuxWorld 18-03-2008
The executive director of the LiMo Foundation discusses his group's efforts to create and establish an open handset platform built on Linux. Full Article

Builder.au 22-02-2008
At the Mobile World Congress, we look at how mobile Linux is already making an impact on handsets, with platforms and toolkits shown off by Trolltech, Access and Azingo. Full Article

Builder.au 22-02-2008
At the Mobile World Congress, we examine Linux handsets which are already on the market, as well as a low-cost Linux-based 3G phone and Google's Android platform. Full Article

Electronicstalk 18-02-2008
Combination of Wind River's Platform for consumer devices, Linux edition with the Access Linux platform forms open and flexible Linux-based platform for mobile devices. Full Article

TelecomWeb 14-02-2008
he LiMo (think mobile Linux) Foundation, a trade group created a little more than a year ago to unify the way Linux is used as an underlying cellphone/featurephone operating system, rolled out the strategy for its promised software development kits (SDK), unveiled 18 handsets based on LiMo standards and increased its membership to 32 companies. Full Article

BusinessWeek 14-02-2008
In years past, when the mobile-phone industry gathered for its biggest annual convention, the talk was mostly about bells and whistles—who had the sexiest, thinnest, or most feature-packed handsets. Not this year. At the 2008 Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Spain, the center of attention has shifted to the software inside phones that most consumers don't ever think about. Full Article

Associated Press 13-02-2008
BARCELONA, Spain (AP) — The race is on: A consortium of 32 companies has joined a classic battle for primacy with their demonstration of mobile phones to compete with devices that will run Google Inc.'s fledgling Android operating system. Full Article

Reuters 11-02-2008
BARCELONA (Reuters) - Samsung (005930.KS: Quote, Profile, Research) and LG Electronics (066570.KS: Quote, Profile, Research) on Monday showed new phones using free Linux software from Mobile Linux foundation, which said in total 18 phones from seven vendors would use its software. Full Article

Forbes 11-02-2008
As leaders in the wireless industry meet Monday in Barcelona for the annual Mobile World Congress, they will be buzzing about the latest open software platform for mobile handsets. More companies are signing up to support it. A few phone makers will be flashing hot off the bench prototypes. Software developers will be snapping up just-released development kits. Full Article

PC World 11-02-2008
Several key supporters are abandoning the LiPS standard to embrace its competitor in mobile Linux projects. Full Article

Fierce Mobile Content 11-02-2008
Open source mobile consortium LiMo Foundation unveiled the first handsets based on its fledgling Linux-based LiMo Platform and announced nine new members as well as its SDK strategy during a press conference Monday morning at Mobile World Congress 2008 in Barcelona. Full Article

CNET 11-02-2008
BARCELONA, Spain--Orange and Access have become the latest companies to join the LiMo Foundation, a consortium aimed at promoting mobile Linux. Full Article

InformationWeek 11-02-2008
Working handsets and prototypes were shown by Motorola, NTT DoCoMo, Samsung, LG Electronics, Aplix' OPAL, and Purple Labs.
By W. David Gardner Full Article

Engadget Mobile 11-02-2008
Not to be outdone by a powerful Android presence, the boys and girls at the LiMo Foundation have brought it strong with a series of announcements at Mobile World Congress. Full Article

LinuxInsider 14-11-2007
"We're warmly and publicly welcoming the OHA. The reason we're doing that is because it is very different from LiMo. Google's background and focus within mobile are on the user experience and, in particular, on bringing the next generation of mobile Internet experience to consumers," said Morgan Gillis, executive director of the LiMo Foundation. Full Article

eWeek 07-11-2007
Google's mobile applications platform could cut red tape on application development. Full Article

CNET 06-11-2007
An interview with the LiMo Foundation's Executive Director Morgan Gillis Full Article

BusinessWeek 06-11-2007
Its Open Handset Alliance, including Intel, Motorola, and T-Mobile, could threaten Symbian and Microsoft—and redouble investments in mobile software Full Article

The Register 06-11-2007
The view from the LiMo Window Full Article

GigaOM 05-11-2007
Now that the Google Phone platform has been unveiled, one thing is abundantly clear: Happy days are around the corner for Mobile Linux. Full Article

USA Today 04-11-2007
Overview of the Google announcement including an interview with LiMo Foundation Executive Director Morgan Gillis Full Article

O'Reilly ONLamp.com 13-08-2007
I ran into a beehive of standardization activity at LinuxWorld Expo this year. The outcomes of these efforts aren’t the traditional standardization documents, numbingly complex yet short on critical detail, that companies have to rush to implement. Full Article

IT World Canada 08-08-2007
The market can expect to see by 2008 the fruits of a recently-formed initiative to develop the first globally available Linux-based mobile device platform based on industry-developed standards. Full Article

Network Computing 08-08-2007
Devoted to fostering usage of Linux on handsets, The LiMo Foundation welcomes several new vendors into their fold. Can these new members help rally support for Mobile Linux? Full Article

IT Conversations 08-08-2007
Podcast of an interview with LiMo Foundation Executive Director Morgan Gillis Full Article

InfoWorld 07-08-2007
LiMo Foundation gains new members; group will work to create a Linux platform for mobile device Full Article

ars technica 07-08-2007
Overview of the LiMo Platform Full Article

InformationWeek 06-08-2007
The LiMo Foundation, which is developing a Linux-based platform for mobile phones, expects the first handsets using its platform will begin appearing during the first half of 2008. Full Article