EPOC is a family of operating systems developed by Psion for portable devices, primarily PDAs. EPOC is rumoured
to derive from "Electronic Piece Of Cheese", or from epoch - the beginning of an era.[citation needed]
EPOC16
EPOC16, originally simply named EPOC, is the operating system developed by Psion in the late 1980s and early 1990s for Psion's
"SIBO" (SIxteen Bit Organisers) devices. All EPOC16 devices feature an 8086-family processor
and a 16-bit architecture. EPOC16 is a single-user pre-emptive multitasking operating system,
written in Intel 8086 assembler language and C and designed to be delivered in ROM. SIBO devices include the: MC200, MC400,
Series 3, Series 3a, Series 3c, Series 3mx, Siena, Workabout and Workabout mx. The MC400 and
MC200, the first EPOC16 devices, shipped in 1989, and as of
September 2007, the Workabout mx is still in production.
In the late 1990s the operating system was referred to as EPOC16 to distinguish it from Psion's new EPOC32 OS.
EPOC32, Symbian OS
The first version of EPOC32, Release 1 appeared on the Psion Series 5 ROM v1.0 in
1997. Later, ROM v1.1 featured Release 3 (Release 2 was never publicly available.) These were followed by the Series 5mx,
Revo / Revo plus, Series 7 / netBook
and netPad (which all featured Release 5).
The EPOC32 operating system, at the time simply referred to as EPOC, was later renamed Symbian OS. Adding to the confusion
with names, before the change to Symbian, EPOC16 was often referred to as SIBO to distinguish it from the "new" EPOC. Despite the
similarity of the names, EPOC32 and EPOC16 were completely different operating systems, EPOC32 being written in C++ from a new
codebase with development beginning during the mid 1990s.
EPOC32 is a pre-emptive multitasking, single user operating system with memory
protection, which encourages the application developer to separate their program into an engine and an interface. The Psion line of PDAs come with a graphical user
interface called EIKON which is specifically tailored for handheld machines with a
keyboard (thus looking perhaps more similar to desktop GUIs than palmtop GUIs). However, one of EPOC's characteristics is the
ease with which new GUIs can be developed based on a core set of GUI classes, a feature which has been widely explored from
Ericsson R380 and onwards.
EPOC32 was originally developed for the ARM family of processors, including the
ARM7, ARM9, StrongARM and
Intel's XScale, but can be compiled towards target devices using several other processor
types.
During the development of EPOC32, Psion planned to license EPOC to third-party device manufacturers, and spin off its software
division as Psion Software. One of the first licensees was the short-lived Geofox, which halted production with less than
1,000 units sold. Ericsson marketed a rebranded Psion Series 5mx called the MC218, and
later created the EPOC Release 5.1 based smartphone, the R380. Oregon Scientific also released a budget EPOC device, the Osaris (notable as the only EPOC device to ship with Release 4).
In June 1998, Psion Software became Symbian, a major joint
venture between Psion and phone manufacturers Ericsson, Motorola, and Nokia. As of Release 6, EPOC became known simply as
Symbian OS.
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