You may remember Symbian as an OS for old-school smartphones, but it had touch-centric branches as well. Who here has used a phone with Symbian UIQ? Its a dinosaur now, extinct and replaced by better adapted species, but like those Jurassic reptiles, UIQ still draws interest from gawking visitors to the museum.
UIQs story begins at Symbian Ltd. - a collaboration between Nokia, Sony, Ericsson, Motorola and Psion - in the distant 1998. In 2002, the newly formed Sony Ericsson started using UIQ for its touch-enabled phones.
The company had some prior experience, courtesy of the Ericsson R380. Launched in 2000, it was the first device marketed as a "smartphone" and the first phone to run Symbian (only Psion-made PDAs came before). It had a black and white touchscreen, part of which was covered by a flip out keypad. Ericsson developed an in-house interface, which predates UIQ.
Ericsson R380
The R380 had Nokias Communicators to contend with, which had their own branch of touch-flavored Symbian (Series 80 and Series 90). Sony Ericsson became the main user UIQ.
Version 1.0 seems lost to history, but the Sony Ericsson P800 was the first to use version 2.0. It followed the R380 design with a flip out keypad (which could also be detached). This allowed for seamless transition between "phone" and "PDA" style of operation.
Sony Ericsson P800
P900 would move to UIQ 2.1 in 2003, followed a year later by the P910. This marked the first major innovation since that old Ericsson - the flip now held a full hardware QWERTY keyboard. Note the vertical orientation of this setup, it runs counter to l andscape orientation of the Nokia 9500 (a Series 80 competitor from the same year).
Sony Ericsson P900 ⢠Sony Ericsson P910
In 2005, the Sony Ericsson P990 would change the form factor again - the screen was cut short, to make room for a permanent QWERTY below it. The flip maintained the phone keypad, but SE was transitioning away from the large touchscreen and towards a more traditional setup. By the way, this was the first Symbian UIQ 3.0 phone.
The M600 did away with the flip and made the hardware keys bigger with a half QWERTY arrangement. The W950 was similar, but had a keypad below its screen instead.
Sony Ericsson P990 ⢠Sony Ericsson M600 ⢠Sony Ericsson W950
Then in 2007 came the last of the line, the Sony Ericsson P1. The touchscreen was again augmented by a fixed half QWERTY. It wasnt the last Sony Ericsson with UIQ (that honor goes to 2008s G700 and G900), but the P-series had come to an end, 7 years after the R380.
Sony Ericsson P1
In late 2006, around the time that the M600 and W950 were launched, Sony Ericsson bought out Symbian UIQ. You could call it a sign of faith in the touchscreen experience, but the coincidence with the reduced role of the touchscreen in SEs lineup is obvious.
A year later, SE agreed to split UIQ equally with Motorola, which was already using it for devices such as 2003s A920 and 2004s A1000. Notice how these are all about the touchscreen with only a few hardware keys. But Moto had its moment of doubt too, releasing the RIZR Z8 and RIZR Z10 with odd, angled slide-out mechanisms that revealed hardware keys.
Motorola A920 ⢠Motorola A1000 ⢠Motorola RIZR Z8 ⢠Motorola RIZR Z10
Nothing much happened with Symbian UIQ since then. Multiple factors lead to this. The most important one was of course the launch of the iPhone in 2007. Also, Sony Ericssons 2008 touch flagship was the Xperia X1. Yes, the much loved Xperia line was born, except this phone was based on Windows Mobile 6.1. Later that year, Nokia transitioned the hugely successful Symbian Series 60 to touch with the 5800.
2009 saw two Xperias - the Windows Mobile-powered X2 and (finally) the Android-running X10. Touchscreen phones had clearly won at this point, but it was not Symbian UIQ that that was at the helm.
Sony Ericsson Xperia X1 ⢠Nokia 5800 XpressMusic ⢠Sony Ericsson Xperia X2 ⢠Sony Ericsson Xperia X10
(Sony) Ericsson has been building up touch-enabled Symbian since 2000, it had a massive head start on the iPhone (even more so on Android). Perhaps the stylus-based roots of UIQ held it back, compared to t he finger-first iPhone. Perhaps it was Nokia and Sony Ericsson pulling in two different directions (UIQ apps did not run on S60 and vice versa). Or perhaps it was something else altogether.
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