Yes, I also hope they change their minds with Qt. I filed a complain to Nokia, unfortunately I did not find a corresponding site at the .com based Nokia site, QT is a user interface and has absolutely nothing to do with SyncML which is a protocol... Of course. What I meant was that, now that Nokia have bought Trolltech (the makers of the Qt cross-platform tool kit), perhaps Nokia will use Qt to make a PC client application for their phones that will run everywhere QT does.
If your inferring that as a goal because they purchased Trolltech I think it is a massive leap. Nokia is an enormous organization, many parts of Nokia probably don't even know that they purchased Trolltech and certainly don't know why.
And that is quite a few places. As Nokia make the server side of the SyncML in question (it is in their phone), they would be in a fantastic position to know how to make a client. And they could now make one client that runs on all platforms.
There is little profit motive to develop a client [which is a very expensive thing to do, especially a cross-platform client - there are many cross platform issues beyond the UI level, particularly when it comes to communicating with devices]. If the phone/device wants a SyncML service have you considered just installing one on your workstation/desktop. Funambol is a SyncML server and it is free and Open Source. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org