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Re: Bold Suggestion for Nokia
Well, as far as I'm concerned the PalmOS application user interface is way better than gtk or anything running on Winmob devices. Go into edit mode? Just tap on the item. No buttons needed, no walking up and down menu hierarchies. And so on. Yes, I would like to have the API available for the NIT. If it's feasible? Could be that it isn't, or Access (and before that PalmSource) wouldn't have spent years on it without getting there.
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Re: Bold Suggestion for Nokia
In terms of apps I think you'd be better off copying the Psion ones (i.e. calendar, todo, etc.).
If you want a runtime to support lots of pre-existing apps then what about porting the OPL runtime. Source code is available (written in funny Symbian C++) for anyone who fancies it. |
Re: Bold Suggestion for Nokia
Absolutely, the EPOC R5 built-in application suite is the de facto minimum standard for any mobile device. And it's 12 years old.
Agenda and Jotter were fantastic. And Data, Word and Sheet are all excellent applications to have - and gave a really rich and functional device out-of-the-box. Having a port of ER5's Agenda with some standards-based synching OTA (e.g. SyncML) would be my idea of nirvana. I might have to give the latest GPE a try, admittedly, since it's been a while since I used it last. |
Re: Bold Suggestion for Nokia
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One of the things I always loved about Palm devices is exactly what you describe: just tap and start writing. In Date Book, an event is created; in To-do, a todo list item is created, in Memos, a new note springs into existence. But "Date Book" is not the Garnet "Calendar"; to do anything with that calendar event or Tasks item, you have to go into Palm's annoying dialog boxes. Palm's UI has gotten cluttered in recent years, and it needs to be cleaned up. Although choice of API influences User Interface, they're different animals. There's really no reason (AFAIK) why someone couldn't write a GTK-based calendar app that allowed you to just start typing to create a calendar event; it's just that no one has. But GTK is relatively consistent across platforms; a GTK app on Linux runs more or less the same way on Windows (Pidgin comes to mind), and with some caveats, on Maemo. Palm changes things to Garnet with every new device, so just because your app works on all devices today doesn't mean that it will run on Palm's new device tomorrow. This isn't because they've introduced any new features though; Palm OS "5.4.9" has been running every device they've made since the LifeDrive. My point is, Palm is toast. Their OS is old, bad, spaghetti code. The mobile Linux community should learn from their UI successes (and mistakes) and make their own apps. Trying to bring the current Palm crud to Maemo is only asking for headaches. Nokia buying Palm (the original topic of this thread) would be throwing away money, as the software in question would be useless on Maemo or Symbian and the people in question have been working on the computer equivalent of an evolutionary deadend. |
Re: Bold Suggestion for Nokia
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Re: Bold Suggestion for Nokia
Yeah, the N810's keyboard does offer advantages there. For instance, I can just type into fields over rdesktop without touching the screen.
But the way every app should work on the tablets, IMO, is that a cursor pops up in the first or default editable field in any and every app upon opening. It frustrate sme that this is not the case. Just don't get me started on lack of a dedicated tab key on the N810... : / |
Re: Bold Suggestion for Nokia
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Whether or not "someone can" is like discussing the capabilities of vaporware that hasn't even been designed yet, much less delivered. It's irrelevant. What is relevant is: there IS a base of productivity apps out there. There IS a user community out there that is hanging on to that base of applications waiting for a new thing that will support them. If you want to discuss what someone could do, someone could steal both of those things by providing a compatibility layer to fill the gap until that application community ports to a new native platform. Give them a direction, that is solid, usable, and has promise, and you can bet that they'll take it. |
Re: Bold Suggestion for Nokia
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Therefore you'd be better off petitioning Nokia to release a set of PIM tools if that's your main concern. In terms of the application developers, if they see a toolchain that is reasonably easy to use, and the Nokia devices build up a reasonable following (in the same way that Psion and Palm did) then these people will simply change language/tools and write for the Nokia instead. I do think that the controlling factor here is whether a given developer has one of these Nokia tablets. People don't write applications for platforms/devices that they don't own (unless they are similar enough e.g. 770 vs n800 vs n810). So my conclusion is that the more people buy these devices, the more applications will be written (which is reasonable I think). It's a shame that there's no official OS2008 for the 770, which is now very cheap and a good way to get developers to try the platform and move over from something else like Palm. |
Re: Bold Suggestion for Nokia
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As for the Garnet Calendar and Tasks - I'm still simply tapping. I'm not certain what exactly you're refering to, but maybe you're using it differently. For me the calendar couldn't be simpler to use. |
Re: Bold Suggestion for Nokia
Palm OS does actually have a paradigm that I wish maemo had: Useful core apps (e.g., PIM, life organizational stuff) that sync from the device to any computer and then can be altered on the computer (via PalmDesktop) and synced back to the device.
Functionality, gracefulness, age, love/hate Palm aside, this is very user-centered. Apple has succeeded in this as well with iTunes being their PalmDesktop. If the ITs had a platform-independent desktop app that synced with a number of useful core apps (calendar, email, todos, contacts, mp3s, photos, video, etc.), plus it could be upgraded without losing all of that stuff (yes, I know this will happen with OS2008, but Palm has been doing it for decades), I think it would be very well received. So, in this regard, I can see why the original poster felt led to begin this discussion. Tim |
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