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Posts: 772 | Thanked: 183 times | Joined on Jul 2005 @ Montclair, NJ (NYC suburbs)
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I met Reggie in Berlin before the Maemo Summit, and he was working on his presentation, What Users Want (which will be posted soon, btw). I looked over the notes that Krisse Juorunen of Internet Tablet School had sent him and made some suggestions. I thought about how the tablet is being used today and how it might be used -- which was exactly what Ari Jaaksi asked a group of Maemo users the next evening.

I ended up putting my thoughts down on paper (unable to use the hotel's power converters with Nokia's AC-4U battery charger!). I hadn't put in for a speaking slot, so making notes was just a way to keep my head in the topic while Reggie was working on his slides. He didn't finish till 4 a.m. on Thursday night, so I kept writing. Here is what I wrote up but didn't say at the Maemo Summit:

What more do we want?

In Ari Jaaksi's talk at OSiM World, he characterized the reception of the 770 Internet Tablet as people asking, "What is this PDA that doesn't have PDA functions? What is this phone that isn't a phone?"

No one had seen a mobile device like this, explicitly designed for internet use: a full computer without a keyboard, without a hard disk, which fit in your pocket and was light enough that it didn't act like an anchor.[1]

A computer you could use standing up. This was cool, but what was truly revolutionary was that you could surf the internet while on the move. This was so startling, sensible and incredible that all you had to do was use it this way once to understand why you'd want such a tablet. It was nearly two years when I walked twenty blocks down Seventh Avenue in New York on my way into the office, all the while browsing nytimes.com and washingtonpost.com, but I remember it like it was this morning.

This was real surfing, the real web and not the pseudo-web found on cellphones, web pages at full width, without any sideways scrolling.

As it happens, I belong to the first generation of kids who grew up with computers[2], and the upside of growing up under Moore's Law has been a sharply honed appreciation for the marginal cost of production of electronic goods.[3] In general this means we know we don't have to wait long before we can afford some new feature. But a little-understood side-effect is a widespread suspicion of paying for certain things electronic, especially if the vendor erects artificial barriers around them. Who would pay for email today? Or IM? Or believes that we should have each paid a penny to Unisys every time we used a GIF graphic? After "this long" -- which is measured in seasons, not years -- we don't want to pay for something really useful based on the logic that somebody or other happened to think of first and we owe them.

That is why the second Internet Tablet, the N800, seemed to me to be revolutionary too -- now we could have face-to-face voip calls, visual IM sessions lasting hours if we wanted, untethered from our desks and sidestepping the venal pricing schemes for similar services using cellphones which telecoms wanted to put into effect that were already five to six years out of line.

Likewise, the N810's built-in GPS could enable radically new location-based services -- Where in the museum are all the students on this field trip? What is the painting I'm standing in front of and what does Wikipedia say about it? -- that are conceivable only when you combine the full internet, a full computer and carryaround size.

So I want to note that all three devices have legitimate claims of being revolutionary.

I marvel at that, but that's not what I will expect from Nokia with every new device.

As a strategy, Nokia can't do better than to add applications that take full advantage of its superior screen. We've been told about the coming high-def camera connectivity, which fits this thinking. Likewise, the 800-pixel-wide screen could show more map detail than any GPS screen when Nokia first released its GPS package and then built that technology into the N810. That's the right kind of thinking.

I read over at Tabletblog something Thoughtfix suggested. He said he wanted a bridge app between his camera and blog (and online photo sharing sites) -- something to crop, rotate and color-correct images on the fly. I second that. Anything that facilitates camera-to-web flow makes the Internet Tablet more indispensable.

Stop and think about it. It's not just because of the big screen. The NIT fits into this flow because it's a computer. It has the processor and memory and programmability, way more than anyone can stick in a camera or cellphone. Take advantage of that.

When I'm asked what I want in the tablet -- what users in general might want -- I think about what apps on the desktop will acquire a whole new dimension when untethered from the desktop. Basically I'm just looking for a lesser version of the liberating effect we first experienced when the 770 untethered the web.

So, obviously, I think about e-books, since the most infamous requirement for their success, as Michael Kinsley so memorably put it, is that you can take your reading with you to the john.

Now, of course, FBreader gives us this already, it being probably the best engineered open-source e-reader around, providing the longest list of formats read and the greatest personalization of presentation.

But you can't buy any of tens of thousands of e-books sold by Amazon or Sony for reading on their black-and-white e-Ink devices. Something like one million Sony Readers and Amazon Kindles will be sold this year.

Imagine that -- people paying $359 and $400 for a monochrome, slow-drawing, essentially single-use device just because they like to read.

Nokia -- which was so far-sighted in 1998 that it participated in the creation of the first e-book format -- ought to be hounding Amazon harder than it ever did eBay/Skype to put its proprietary software on the Internet Tablet. All that will do is increase book sales at Amazon, increasing the number of potential customers vastly, and why should that interest Jeff Bezos?

Me, I'm only interested in being able to read Dave Barry's new book, Science Fair, while I'm stuck in my third doctor's waiting room in two days, as I was recently, but that's not even in the realm of possibility[4] if I can't get it electronically because getting to a bookstore is impossible for me these days.

For that matter, I'd like to be able to keep reading that book while I'm driving to and from these doctor's offices and ferrying the kids hither and yon.[5] Text-to-speech counts for double, too -- I get my book and it's something that needs more computer than the cellphones can manage.

Build on your advantages. That's the best expression of what I'd like to see coming from Nokia.

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[1] There were "web pads" before the 770 -- WiFi-equipped, touch-sensitive, disk-drive-free tablets, usually running an embedded Linux, like Screen Media's FreePad. But none of them light enough, small enough and inexpensive enough to be indispensable when you walked out the door.

[2] There were fewer than 10,000 computers in existence around the world when I first learned to program as a schoolboy, 85,000 when I bought my own first computer. That put me in the first .01 percent of computer owners and a user of the first .001 percent of computers.

[3] See The Law of Computer Entropy.

[4] Actually, Science Fair's release date is October 14, so that's another reason.

[5] On the level of Samantha, Sangeeta and Lee, voices from RealSpeak TTS, Callie from Cepstral or Heather from Acapala Group.
Read the full article.

Last edited by RogerS; 2008-10-07 at 17:35.
 

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