Cell Phones, Web Browsers to Get VOIP Feature
VOIP-based telephony from upstart JaJah will be standard on Symbian cell phones and Opera Web browsers.
An Internet phone service called JaJah will become standard on a significant cell phone operating system, and the Opera Web browser for computers and cell phones, the company announced April 5. The announcement was
Read more here about Skype, perhaps the worlds largest VOIP provider.
In the case of JaJah, by June, a version of its Internet telephony will be part of the Symbian operating system.
For now, Symbian phones represent a minuscule fraction of the nearly 2 billion cell phones in circulation, and many are used by mobile professionals.
Symbian is significant despite the low market share because major cell phone makers control the company that owns the operating system. The handset makers intend Symbian to serve as the basis for next generation handsets to come.
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JaJah is also to become an addition to the Opera Web browser for both personal computers and cell phones, which is distributed by Opera Software, based in Oslo, Norway.
Opera has small, cult-like following among personal computer users that, in comparison, pales to the market share of the leading browsers.
But its a brighter story when focusing on cell phones. About 20 million cell phones, many of them using Symbian, come with the browser already loaded.
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