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OranAgra's Avatar
Posts: 33 | Thanked: 15 times | Joined on Oct 2009 @ Israel
#1
Hi all,
For a long time I’ve been frustrated by the people around me considering buying iPhones, Androids and Symbians without really understanding anything about these platforms and only judging popularity hypes.

Finally I couldn’t sleep one night, and sat down to write an article about it.
http://giantmitzy.com/articles/smart...g_systems.html

The purpose of this article is to educate consumers, and explain what the inherent limitations of each platform are (and why they should buy an N900 instead).
My main mission is not even to convince people to buy the N900, but more to prevent them from spamming the world with more devices carrying the ‘bad’ platforms.
To have people vote with their money so that companies will see that the good platforms sell more than the bad platforms.

I invite anyone with a similar mission to refer people to that article, post links in other forums and blogs.
It seems Nokia isn’t investing much in marketing the N900, and maybe we can all do that for them.
If we educate our consumer friends, and maybe convince some journalists to publish the facts so that more consumers will know them, maybe we can help Nokia sell more, thus cause them to invest more effort in that platform.

I’d love to hear your opinions.
 

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Posts: 262 | Thanked: 232 times | Joined on Aug 2009
#2
Your article is so long it will only be read by people who already know how things work.

Edit: but I agree with your objective.

Last edited by livefreeordie; 2010-03-01 at 19:31.
 

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OranAgra's Avatar
Posts: 33 | Thanked: 15 times | Joined on Oct 2009 @ Israel
#3
Originally Posted by livefreeordie View Post
Your article is so long it will only be read by people who already know how things work.
good point.
did you read it? do you intend to? do you have any suggestions how to solve that problem?

another problem is that it is much too technical, but that's what people need to know.. the reasons why one platform is much easier to develop applications for, thus possibly resulting in more third party applications.
 
Posts: 262 | Thanked: 232 times | Joined on Aug 2009
#4
Originally Posted by OranAgra View Post
good point.
did you read it? do you intend to? do you have any suggestions how to solve that problem?
I skimmed it. You could separate the technical stuff into a different article with anchors, and link to them when you need to justify something. A shorter version with lots of bullet points and simple decision->effect statements is what you need if you want the average consumer to understand.

There are 7 completely unnecessary paragraphs in the beginning. If you need an outline, do it in one paragraph, then get to the point.
 
casper27's Avatar
Posts: 844 | Thanked: 521 times | Joined on Jan 2009 @ UK southampton
#5
And the winner for post with longest title in the world goes to....Lol
 
Posts: 71 | Thanked: 19 times | Joined on Dec 2009
#6
what I judge if N900 is good or not is if community can make Mer run on N8x0.

Nokia only support its device for 1.5 year. I hope community can have enough resource from Nokia to continue Nokia product lifecycle in our hand.

Now close source part of maemo OS prevent Mer's developers to reach their goal of this wonderful project.
 
Posts: 529 | Thanked: 46 times | Joined on Sep 2007
#7
thanks
i am the winner
 
Posts: 1,096 | Thanked: 760 times | Joined on Dec 2008
#8
maybe a meego target for cocotron and an iphone api emulation layer in meego

voila, 1 million apps for meego.

not really that simple, but talk about stealing thunder
 
SubCore's Avatar
Posts: 850 | Thanked: 626 times | Joined on Sep 2009 @ Vienna, Austria
#9
nice article, good job!

one word of caution, though:
you make the argument that development for the iphoneOs / symbian is a costly process, requiring you to pay the platform provider just so you can distribute for that platform (the "certification problem").

now, consider these two threads:
http://talk.maemo.org/showthread.php?t=34661
http://talk.maemo.org/showthread.php?t=34783

until the Ovi store (finally) gets relaunched, it's still unclear how to deliver commercial apps for Maemo through "official" channels.

of course, this doesn't hinder OSS development which takes place on maemo.org extras, nor does it prevent commercial developers setting up their own repositories and payment systems. it's just something worth noting IMO.
__________________
"What we perceive is not nature itself, but nature exposed to our method of questioning."
-- Werner Karl Heisenberg
 

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OranAgra's Avatar
Posts: 33 | Thanked: 15 times | Joined on Oct 2009 @ Israel
#10
thanks,
Finally a reply with real content.

thanks for letting me know.
the ovi store suxx (sounds too much like symbiansigned.com).

but that demonstrate my point, the ovi store is not part of the platform (unlike apple store), you can set up your won repository and provide links to it from normal web pages (not complex for a user to configure).
like what firefox did.

and if you're a developer with no web server and just a small app that took a week of work, you can distribute it through http://my-maemo.com/ which is also not part of the platform.

if my-maemo.com today doesn't provide developers a payment system (like the ovi store does), then tomorrow a your-maemo.com will rise to provide that service. (just like it can happen for windows mobile based phones)

so the point is, that in both windows mobile and maemo, an application is just an executable, and a developer can publish it without any limitation from the platform or the platform 'owner'.

as for symbian, there you can also distribute applications outside of ovi store, but you can't distribute them without certifying them.
 
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