In the Ewan Spence article, Ewan says
There's no word yet on which platforms this will be targeted at, but it's likely going to be fully Open Source, and I think that once the world gets their hands on the code, we could see it implemented on one of the popular open platforms. To be honest I think many will consider this browser is going to be pointed at the Google Android platform, but all it would take is one or two Symbian coders (or Windows Mobile, or Apple, etc) to spend some time with the source code to have a native version.
http://www.allaboutsymbian.com/news/item/8238_Mozilla_a_few_weeks_away_from_.php
I have been following this browser, and the platforms targetted have always been clear - Windows Mobile and Linux.
Target Platforms
We will first focus our efforts on two platforms/devices running on ARM11 processors (ARM v6):Linux - first device working already is the Nokia N800 (possibly update to N810) running Linux (maemo)
Windows Mobile 6 - a good first device is the HTC S730
These platforms are either already up and running or will be soon - and will allow our community to start testing UX with different hardware characteristics e.g. screen size (N800/N810: 800�480 vs. HTC S730 320�240) and touch-screen vs. non-touch-screen.As many people will quickly notice there is no Symbian version here. We are aware of the millions of Symbian devices in the world and this is just a start and a good area to focus. We�d love help on Symbian if anyone is interested.
http://www.christiansejersen.com/blog/2007/11/20/mobile-goals/
Android has been dismissed as the app environment was based on Java, which was not considered powerful enough.
Maybe a correction to the article would be in order?
Surur