The platform included execution environments for Java, classic Palm OS, and GTK+-based native Linux applications.
[8] The First Else (renamed from Monolith[9]) smartphone, that was being developed by Sharp Corporation in cooperation with Emblaze Mobile and seven other partners, was scheduled for 2009, but was never released and officially cancelled in June 2010.
[10][11] The platform is no longer referenced on Access's website,[12] but Panasonic and NEC released a number of ALP phones for the Japanese market between 2010 and 2013.
A variety of other core components were drawn from mainstream open source projects, including BlueZ, matchbox, cramfs, and others.
Controls were based on signatures and certificates; unsigned applications can be allowed access to a predefined set of safe APIs.