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#481
Originally Posted by nilchak View Post
While we genralise 3G as fast broadband there is a major difference between its sub classes - Edge, UMTS, hsdpa, hspa etc.

The LG feels faster because it is an HSDPA 3G device while the Nokia is a UMTS 3G device.
and more importantly, its a feature phone, not a smartphone (iirc)...
 
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#482
Originally Posted by Jerome View Post
And you don't expect the iPhone (example chosen entirely randomly of course ) to use the omap3 soon? Like late 2009 maybe?
No, I don't expect Apple to use OMAP3, since they're using Samsung at the moment, and it's gonna be out in late 2009, then it's gonna be behind the N900.

I'm not sure what your argument here is, anyway, but, for good measure:
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#483
Originally Posted by Benson View Post
Yeah, but there are also dumbphones (e.g. my Nokia 3555, which is S40) with 3G. What you'd really use it for, besides tethering, is beyond me. The display is horribly low-res, the browser is horribly pathetic, and it reminds me why so many dupes think the iPhone invented the practical mobile web. (I've only tried the built-in browser, as I've been unable to get Opera mini working on it so far, but haven't tried hard.) The whole point of it, to me, was a modem.
Benson,

I have a Nokia 3555 too and, if you are still interested, I installed Opera Mini from here.

I agree with you that this phone only works as a modem.
 

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#484
Originally Posted by brontide View Post
If they wish developers to have continued faith in the platform they have to offer reasonable forward compatibility, lead time, development tools, and a reasonable platform ( that includes a reason for consumers to actually buy it ).
Amen.

This being said, the N800/N810 is bloody good hardware. Maybe we should concentrate on making what we have really useful. It would not take that much effort to polish the present software to quite decent levels.
 

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#485
Originally Posted by nilchak View Post
But if the aim of the tablets is ....
I don't know what the aim of the tablets is. I only know what I need and what I'm willing to spend money on: a tiny laptop-replacement.

Originally Posted by nilchak View Post
But porting an app is only half the job. The actual part is making it usable, and that is where this paradigm fails miserably.
Sometimes I feel there's not only a languages barrier here... It really feels we have two incompatible types of brains. I may understand your words, but I don't understand the way you think so it's difficult for me to answer.

What fails? We have desktop apps on the NITs and they work perfectly. I don't see the desktop paradigm failing.

Originally Posted by nilchak View Post
Why, oh why would a general user want the full featured desktop app on his little 4" screened device ? I mean would I want the tablet apps to be ported over to my little 2" phone next, just so I can have access to most popular apps on every device ? That IS NOT the point of mobile devices.
I have to admit I don't consider myself a general user. I made the experience that what I want is usually a niche product. Actually, I was prepared for the 770 to be a one time only so I'm still somewhat surprised the did the N800 and the N810...

Anyway: My job is not to do market research about the general user (I couldn't care less). Also, I don't think there such a thing as "the point of mobile devices." - I carry several kinds of mobile devices, and I would be very upset if my tablet would be like my phone or my phone would be like my music player. (And I guess my mother would be more than upset if her phone would be like mine...)
There's a point in simplicity when you want it. And there's a point in a rich UI when you need it.

(One more thing about the "general user": It's the market everybody fights for. It might be a wise business decision to concentrate on a few niche markets, too, as long as they're not too small.)

Originally Posted by nilchak View Post
Mobile apps can compliment the desktop apps in function and extend it that way, but just porting a desktop app to a mobile platform, UI and all, does not a mobile application make.
Right, mobile apps can complement the desktop apps in function and extend it that way. That's what I'd expect on my mobile phone.
Then, as an additional device, I have my music player because although my cell phone does play music files, in many situations it's too big as a music player.
And, as a third device, I want a portable computer. I would have a laptop, but it's too big for me. Therefore I chose the 770, now the N800. And the applications on my mobile phone can still complement the desktop applications on my N800-computer.......

Oh, and: The concept might in fact be doomed in a way, at least in the Maemo context. Nokia threatens to introduce a "finger friendly" UI with Maemo 5, which probably means wasted screen estate, less effective UI (more clicks to achieve the same result), less accuracy... This could in fact make it much harder to do anything useful with the tablet.

But until then we'll have quite a lot of alternatives out there and I expect smart people to make it even easier than now to run alternative OSs (like there's Debian etc. already) on both the Nokia tablets and other devices. So in a way, whatever Nokia does to the Maemo UI, as long as they allow people to choose a different OS that better suits my need, I'm fine.

EDIT: One more thing: Even if I'll be using some other OS instead of Maemo 5 - if Nokia really pushes and supports all these upstream projects, chances are that I'll be using most of the core technologies that make people excited about Maemo 5 in, say, Debian on the N900 or in Ubuntu Mobile on whatever esoteric hardware I'll buy. Isn't this world beautiful?

Last edited by benny1967; 2008-09-24 at 21:35.
 

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#486
Originally Posted by brontide View Post
Oh really...so this is as good as we are going to get and we should be happy with it?
Brontide, what part of increasingly is not registering?

Originally Posted by brontide View Post
There are an infinite number of shades of gray. Trying to slap "Increasingly" on it doesn't make it much better when the community *that actually writes and ports the majority of titles* is basically left out in the cold.
Slow down there buckaroo. Now you're trying to tackle two arguments simultaneously, which I was not.

Let's step back a bit in this dance.

You commented as if Nokia was locked into the typical (for any manufacturer) covert development mode. I pointed out that openness has been (steadily, conservatively) increasing.

That's it. That's all. You want to argue other points and positions, great! Just keep them separate and please don't muddy the waters. The signal-to-noise ratio in this thread has already degenerated into static thanks to the usual provocative and misguided hand grenades tossed in.

EDIT: oh, and I acknowledged the grey shades. See "this is not black and white" statement.
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Last edited by Texrat; 2008-09-24 at 21:17.
 
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#487
Originally Posted by benny1967 View Post
I don't know what the aim of the tablets is. I only know what I need and what I'm willing to spend money on: a tiny laptop-replacement.
Didn't I aready cover that with my statement

Originally Posted by nilchak
(don't get me wrong, I understand what you want personally)
 
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#488
@nilchak: Then let me have it!
 
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#489
Originally Posted by SD69 View Post
I would like to have an office suite for the NIT (dreams are free). Maybe we can agree that if you were to port OpenOffice to the NIT w/o modifying the UI, then you are likely to go insane if you tried to use it for a long period of time.
Actually the UI is not half bad if you turn off most of the toolbars, put the remaining toolbars on the sides and go fullscreen. Some of us actually do use OOo on the tablet "for a long period of time;" perhaps we are already insane (by your definition), so that is why we are not driven there.

Evolution e-mail's UI, on the other hand, isn't very usable on the tablet. They don't let you change the layout enough.

I do need to say one thing; I know that desktop UI is not very nice on a handheld device. But, given the choice of a full-featured office suite with a desktop UI and a crappy little text editor with a nice mobile UI, I'll probably choose... both. Sometimes you need one, sometimes you need the other.

Originally Posted by Benson View Post
And I think most people would say it's a combination; obviously it's not going to take over the world by virtue of using desktop software alone, or laptops (running desktop software) would have done so already!)
Seems like every coffee shop around here has as many laptops as there are tables. What's your definition of taking over the world?
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Last edited by qole; 2008-09-24 at 21:53.
 
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#490
Originally Posted by brontide View Post
Engineering is not easy and I don't see Nokia dedicating even more resources then it already has working on Maemo ( 100+ employees? )
I dunno, have you seen the Nokia job boards lately? They're hiring like crazy for maemo. I only wish I could do that stuff. But they don't seem to have any positions available under "annoying know-all gadfly generalist"
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