Trolltech, the creator of Qt, the API used to create KDE and the powerful CROSSPLATFORM C++ development tool, was bought out by Nokia a year or so ago.
Now comes the news that the Nokia CEO is being dumped, will immediately lose his board seat and is being replaced by Stephen Elop, former president of Microsoft's business software group!
I suspect that more and more of the future additions to the Qt technology will disappear behind the LGPL binary and Nokia proprietary licenses and less and less of it will get added to the GPL version. The first thing to suffer, I would wager, will be the QtCreator itself. On the Linux desktop it blows Mono away, and on the Microsoft desktop it equals MSVS and exceeds MSVS when it comes to integration with Qt.
Will he truly work on behalf of Nokia's interests or is he Darth Elop, working behind the scenes for his Lord and Master?
Now comes the news that the Nokia CEO is being dumped, will immediately lose his board seat and is being replaced by Stephen Elop, former president of Microsoft's business software group!
"Nokia has traditionally been strong in hardware, but has been found wanting in software," said Ben Wood, director of research at CCS Insight.
Elop could be the man to change that, according to Wood: "Kallasvuo is a very bright guy, but he has a law degree. Now the guy who will head up the business has a computer science degree. He will bring software expertise to the business."
Elop could be the man to change that, according to Wood: "Kallasvuo is a very bright guy, but he has a law degree. Now the guy who will head up the business has a computer science degree. He will bring software expertise to the business."
Will he truly work on behalf of Nokia's interests or is he Darth Elop, working behind the scenes for his Lord and Master?
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