A smartphone is a mobile phone built on a mobile computing platform, with more advanced computing ability and connectivity than a feature phone.
The most common mobile operating systems (OS) used by modern smartphones include Apple's iOS, Google's Android, Microsoft's Windows Phone, Nokia's Symbian, RIM's BlackBerry OS, and embedded Linux distributions such as Maemo and MeeGo.
Difference between smartphone and feature phone
- The first smartphones were devices that mainly combined the functions of a personal digital assistant (PDA) and a mobile phone or camera phone.
- Today's models also serve to combine the functions of portable media players, low-end compact digital cameras, pocket video cameras, and GPS navigation units.
- Modern smartphones typically also include high-resolution touchscreens, web browsers that can access and properly display standard web pages rather than just mobile-optimized sites, and high-speed data access via Wi-Fi and mobile broadband.
The most common mobile operating systems (OS) used by modern smartphones include Apple's iOS, Google's Android, Microsoft's Windows Phone, Nokia's Symbian, RIM's BlackBerry OS, and embedded Linux distributions such as Maemo and MeeGo.
- Such operating systems can be installed on many different phone models, and typically each device can receive multiple OS software updates over its lifetime.
Difference between smartphone and feature phone
- Feature phones is the term generally used to describe low-end devices, while smartphone is used to describe high-end devices, though there is no official definition to distinguish the two categories.[3][4] Originally, the term referred to mobile phones with more features than other contemporary "dumb" mobile phones,[5] and smartphone and feature phone are not mutually exclusive categories.[6]
- The price difference between a smartphone and feature phone is often used to distinguish the two devices.
- An additional complication in distinguishing between smartphones and feature phones is that over time the capabilities of new models of feature phones can increase to exceed those of phones that had been promoted as smartphones in the past.
- One of the most significant differences is that the advanced application programming interfaces (APIs) on smartphones for running third-party applications[4] can allow those applications to have better integration with the phone's OS and hardware than is typical with feature phones.
- In comparison, feature phones more commonly run on proprietary firmware, with third-party software support through platforms such as Java ME or BREW.[1]
Security vulnerability
- Feature phones are more vulnerable to telephone tapping and mobile phone tracking than smartphones on several grounds;
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