Starting Friday, the company will begin selling Alcatel's One Touch Fire with Firefox OS in 850 stores in Poland, with sales in Greece and Hungary to follow in the fall. July 11, 2013 8:47 AM PDT the Alcatel One Touch Fire, a Firefox OS phone (Credit: Sarah Tew/CNET) A week after Telefonica became the first carrier to sell Firefox OS phones, Deutsche Telekom has become the second. The German company will begin selling the Alcatel One Touch Fire with Mozilla's Firefox OS in Poland starting Friday in 850 shops and online, the company said Thursday. Deutsche Telekom subsidiaries Magyar Telekom in Hungary and Cosmote in Greece will begin selling the phones starting in the fall. The company didn't release pricing details. Alcatel One Touch Fire (pictures) 1-2 of 8 Scroll Left Scroll Right Firefox OS is a browser-based operating system that runs Web apps, which gives it a running start when trying to attract developers. Although it can handle Web sites and apps on its own, Firefox OS benefits when developers adapt their software with support for newer mobile browser technology for actions like handling multitouch input and gathering data from a phone's accelerometer. Related stories Firefox OS phone launches Tuesday in Spain at $3 a month Foxconn taking Firefox OS to tablets, not just phones Mozilla teams up with Foxconn to debut a Firefox OS tablet? Mozilla offers developers phones to write Firefox OS apps Firefox OS developer phones sold out With Firefox OS, Mozilla hopes to break some of the ecosystem locks of iOS and Android that can confine customers to interlinked hardware, operating systems, app stores, and services. Mobile network operators and handset makers -- and there are many -- see it as a way to push back at the dominant companies in the market. "With Firefox OS we are expanding our existing portfolio with a new operating system that is open, developer-friendly, and reasonably priced," said Claudia Nemat, a Deutsche Telekom board member for Europe and technology, in a statement. Firefox OS is found on lower-end phones right now, aiming for cost-conscious buyers upgrading from feature phones, but Mozilla hopes to extend to higher-end markets later. Though Mozilla has won over some allies to the cause, the operating system faces formidable challenges in denting the dominance of Apple's iOS and Google's Android. Deutsche Telekom publicly joined the Firefox OS project in July 2012 along with Sprint, Telecom Italia, and Telenor. Since then, Mozilla has lined up many other hardware and carrier partners.

Posted by : Unknown Thursday, July 11, 2013

Starting Friday, the company will begin selling Alcatel's One Touch Fire with Firefox OS in 850 stores in Poland, with sales in Greece and Hungary to follow in the fall.



July 11, 2013 8:47 AM PDT



the Alcatel One Touch Fire, a Firefox OS phone

the Alcatel One Touch Fire, a Firefox OS phone


(Credit: Sarah Tew/CNET)

A week after Telefonica became the first carrier to sell Firefox OS phones, Deutsche Telekom has become the second.


The German company will begin selling the Alcatel One Touch Fire with Mozilla's Firefox OS in Poland starting Friday in 850 shops and online, the company said Thursday.


Deutsche Telekom subsidiaries Magyar Telekom in Hungary and Cosmote in Greece will begin selling the phones starting in the fall. The company didn't release pricing details.



Alcatel One Touch Fire (pictures)


1-2 of 8


Scroll Left Scroll Right



Firefox OS is a browser-based operating system that runs Web apps, which gives it a running start when trying to attract developers. Although it can handle Web sites and apps on its own, Firefox OS benefits when developers adapt their software with support for newer mobile browser technology for actions like handling multitouch input and gathering data from a phone's accelerometer.



With Firefox OS, Mozilla hopes to break some of the ecosystem locks of iOS and Android that can confine customers to interlinked hardware, operating systems, app stores, and services. Mobile network operators and handset makers -- and there are many -- see it as a way to push back at the dominant companies in the market.


"With Firefox OS we are expanding our existing portfolio with a new operating system that is open, developer-friendly, and reasonably priced," said Claudia Nemat, a Deutsche Telekom board member for Europe and technology, in a statement.


Firefox OS is found on lower-end phones right now, aiming for cost-conscious buyers upgrading from feature phones, but Mozilla hopes to extend to higher-end markets later.


Though Mozilla has won over some allies to the cause, the operating system faces formidable challenges in denting the dominance of Apple's iOS and Google's Android.


Deutsche Telekom publicly joined the Firefox OS project in July 2012 along with Sprint, Telecom Italia, and Telenor. Since then, Mozilla has lined up many other hardware and carrier partners.



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