Bada (operating system)
Discontinued mobile operating system From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Discontinued mobile operating system From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bada (stylized as bada; Korean: 바다) was a mobile operating system developed by Samsung Electronics for devices such as mid- to high-end smartphones[2] and tablet computers. The name is derived from "바다 (bada)", meaning "ocean" or "sea" in Korean. All phones running Bada were branded with the name Wave, unlike Samsung's Android devices which are branded as Galaxy.[citation needed]
Developer | Samsung Electronics |
---|---|
Written in | C++[1] |
OS family | Linux |
Working state | Discontinued (replaced by Tizen) |
Source model | Mixed: proprietary and open source components |
Final release | 2.0.6 SDK / 28 February 2013 |
Marketing target | Smartphone |
Available in | Multilingual |
Package manager | Samsung Kies |
Kernel type | Monolithic (Linux Kernel) |
Default user interface | TouchWiz, graphical (touchscreen) |
License | Proprietary |
Official website | www |
Bada | |
Hangul | 바다 |
---|---|
Revised Romanization | Bada |
McCune–Reischauer | Pada |
Bada is based on Mentor Graphics' Nucleus RTOS kernel[3] or Linux kernel, and was planned to become as middleware separated from an OS kernel, but development was discontinued. To foster adoption of Bada, Samsung reportedly considered releasing the source code under an open-source license, and expanding device support to include Smart TVs.[4]
In June 2012 Samsung announced its intention to merge Bada into the Tizen project,[5][6] while still using it in parallel with Google's Android OS and Microsoft's Windows Phone on its smartphones. On 25 February 2013, Samsung announced that it would stop developing Bada, moving development to Tizen instead.[7][8] Bug reporting was terminated in April 2014.[9]
After the announcement of Bada, the Wave S8500, which would eventually turn to be the first Bada-based phone, was first shown to the public at Mobile World Congress 2010 in Barcelona in February 2010. Alongside Bada itself, some applications running on Bada were exhibited, including mobile videogames like Gameloft's Asphalt 5.[10] The Wave S8500 was released in May that year,[11][12] and sold one million handsets over the first four weeks on the market.[13]
According to Samsung, companies such as Twitter, EA, Capcom, Gameloft and Blockbuster revealed their support for the Bada platform by having arranged development partnerships with Samsung since before the launch, and shared a few insights about their vision for the future of mobile apps and how Bada would play a role in it. These were a showcase of what could be heard in a series of events held across the world during the year 2010, called Developer Days. In addition, it was made public the announcement of an incoming Bada Developer Challenge with a total prize of $2,700,000 (USD) throughout the launch event.[14] In May 2010, Samsung released a beta of their Bada software development kit (SDK), making it available to the general public as it had done with partners the previous December, to entice potential developers of applications for this platform.[15] In August 2010, Samsung released version 1.0 of the Bada SDK. A year later, in August 2011, version 2.0 of the Bada SDK was released.[citation needed]
The Samsung S8500 Wave was launched with version 1.0 of the Bada operating system. Samsung soon released version 1.0.2, which included minor fixes for European users.[16] Version 1.2 was released with the Samsung S8530 Wave II phone.[17] The alpha-version of Bada 2.0 was introduced on 15 February 2011, with the Samsung S8530 Wave II handset.
The final flagship Bada handset was the Samsung Wave III S8600, running Bada 2.0.
The Bada 2.0 version was shown at IFA 2011 in Berlin and was released in the end of December 2011 with a lot of new functions and improvements compared to version 1.2, introducing features such as:
With the release of the Samsung Wave, Samsung opened an international application store, Samsung Apps, for the Bada platform.[18] It had over 2,400 applications and was also available for Android and Samsung feature phones.[19]
Samsung created a new app store for its subsequent mobile OS, Tizen.[20][needs update]
Architecture of bada
The bada architecture consists of the following four layers:
- Kernel
This layer contains either the real-time operating system or the Linux kernel, depending on device hardware configuration.
- Device
- Service
- Framework[21]
Bada was defined by Samsung as not an operating system itself but a platform with a kernel configurable architecture, which allowed using either a proprietary real-time operating system hybrid (RTOS) kernel or the Linux kernel.[22] According to copyrights displayed by Samsung Wave S8500, it used code from FreeBSD, NetBSD and OpenBSD.
The device layer provided core functions such as graphics, protocols, telephony and security. The service layer provided more service-centric features such as SMS, mapping and in-app-purchasing, handled by a Bada Server. The top layer, the framework layer, provided an application programming interface (API) in C++ for application developers to use.
Bada provided various UI controls to developers, and a web browser control based on the open-source WebKit, and featured Adobe Flash, supporting Flash versions 9 to 11 (Flash Lite 4 with ActionScript 3.0 support) in Bada 2.0. Both of the latter could be embedded inside native Bada applications. It supported the OpenGL ES 2.0 3D graphics API and offered interactive mapping with point of interest (POI) features, which could also be embedded inside native applications.[23] It supported pinch-to-zoom, tabbed browsing and cut, copy, and paste features.[24]
Bada's interaction methods that could be incorporated into applications included sensors such as motion sensing, vibration control, face detection, accelerometer, magnetometer, tilt, Global Positioning System (GPS), and multi-touch.[15]
Native applications were developed in C++ with the Bada SDK, and the Eclipse based integrated development environment (IDE). GNU-based tool chains were used for building and debugging applications. The IDE also contained a drag and drop application for designing application interfaces, and an emulator for apps.
Some publications criticized Bada 1.x over the following issues:
By the end of 2011, Samsung released three new models, preloaded with Bada 2.0, ending the list of devices running on the short-lived Bada:[30]
This section needs additional citations for verification. (May 2018) |
The chart below show global sales of Bada smartphones from the second quarter of 2010 through the second quarter of 2013.[citation needed] Canalys, a technology market analysis company, estimated that Samsung shipped 3.5 million phones running Bada in Q1 of 2011.[31] This rose to 4.5 million phones in Q2 of 2011.[32]
According to Gartner, in Q1 2012 Bada gained a grow index of +43%, and rose to 2.7% market share (up from 1.9% in Q1 2011).[33]
In South Korea, the fiscal year is the same as the calendar year.
Fiscal year and quarter | Percentage of global smartphone sales | Smartphones sold (millions) |
---|---|---|
Q2 2010 | 0.9 | 0.6 |
Q3 2010 | 1.1 | 0.9 |
Q4 2010 | 2.0 | 2.0 |
Q1 2011 | 1.9 | 1.9 |
Q2 2011 | 1.9 | 2.1 |
Q3 2011 | 2.2 | 2.5 |
Q4 2011 | 2.1 | 3.1 |
Q1 2012 | 2.7 | 3.8 |
Q2 2012 | 2.7 | 4.2 |
Q3 2012 | 3 | 5.2 |
Q4 2012 | 1.3 | 2.7 |
Q1 2013 | 0.7 | 1.37 |
Q2 2013 | 0.4 | 0.84 |
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