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Re: The "Ecosystem": Why I can’t recommend an N8x0 or N900 to my friend
Just a couple of small corrections...
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I'm really looking forward to rotation in Maemo 5... The whole interface is being designed with rotation in mind. Quote:
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There are better third party converters, anyway. They aren't too hard to find, either. Quote:
It is just difficult to find an OTG host adapter because there are almost no mobile devices on the market that can be OTG hosts, so there's no market for the adapters. But I got one for my N800 for about $10. And don't say that Nokia should have included the adapter in the box, it is part of the USB OTG standard, and most people wouldn't use it. Most printers don't even come with the ($2) USB cable! |
Re: The "Ecosystem": Why I can’t recommend an N8x0 or N900 to my friend
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I do have Advanced Backlight already, it's super nice :D Quote:
I do however have to say the iphone version loads acceptably fast and everything works, including photo albums which were iffy at best in MicroB. Hooray for Webkit. Again, however, your ordinary user isn't going to just realise they should search these forums for "Tear". The built-in browser isn't even named, so if anything, they'd go looking for a newer version of, I don't know, "the Maemo browser"? More likely they'd just assume the browser is the browser is the browser. Quote:
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I installed tablet-encode (on Linux) without a blink, but someone new will see "beta" and "unsupported" and will wonder if they'll break something trying out the Nokia software. Quote:
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Writing this post rather made me sympathise with Pittsburgh's players today :p. It was good experience though, and thanks for the corrections. Nevertheless, I'm seeing a lot that still rules out "normal" users, and for the more advanced folk, I'm still concerned that Nokia isn't really sure what they want to do with the tablets themselves. If they are, they're not really doing a good job showing it as far as I can see. (And feel free to prove me wrong... I want that excuse to buy shiny N810 goodness.) |
Re: The "Ecosystem": Why I can’t recommend an N8x0 or N900 to my friend
my $0.02 worth.
After reading the inishal post, I was oddly moved, most of the conserns raised were the very reason I bought the device and payed an additional $120 to have my brother purchase it in Chicago and ship it to me. I bought my N810 after realizing the 770 (or waterer it is) had an 800 pixel wide screen and wifi, it was a Palm replacement, and I wanted the full web experienced, to be mobile. What blue me away on my N810. I have tyred Linux on my home PC from time to time and inevitably come to the conclusion I am a Windows user and stuck without a GUI. I have got to say installing aps. with preloaded repository in Linux beats Windows hands down. I had never installed an application in Linux until my n810, it is so eazy to install my mom could do it. (i now use many embedded Linux devises and i think it rocks) my n810 was my first GPS device - I wanted something GPS, the n810 was a little disappointing, but suitably impressed with Meamo map and the ability to download odd back country maps. Multitasking OS, the n810 could record audio and take written notes at the same time (cant express how long I have waited for this ability in a hand held device) now I want the ability to track my note taking with the the recorded audio (so clicking on a word will start playing say a recorded meeting 10 seconds before actually writing the note) Imagen a journal linked into your calendar, recording all the audio in a meeting, and taking key points, and using those key points to navigate the audio recording and synking that with you PC (you can skip all the crap that gets said and jump right to the gems) - that said the first company to patient that app. and integrate it will probably win my business - i expect it to be palm. So multitasking is a huge winner, still blows my mind what it allows. I Hate DRM - "DRM = stones", anything DRM is dead for me I cant buy it on principal, so all those DRM pay per use e-books, audio books are non options. I love my freedom wont compromise it and this device gives it to me the way I want it. FB Reader handled all my Palm content 100% and gave me more options, i am impressed. UI took a little getting used too but it is good. (it took me some geting used to the folder structure in Linux to actual find my content, this is the only thing I would fix (as an option to make this device consumer ready) Canola wow what an interface for photos and managing podcasts. I never thought I would uses it so i didn't download it for a while, I was impressed with what i saw on the Zoon and i-pone when it came to managing photos, so I took the plunge and installed Canola. what makes the n810 500% better, is i can be on sight taking photos, unplug the card, and plug it into my n810 and 3 or 4 people can view it almost as seamlessly as if they were prints. as for pod casting i could improve Canola a lot, but it has set the bar high, and no device to date can match it (i-pod all you like) i can subscribe to any (ANY) RSS feed in Canola and download 5 -6 podcasts at once just by viewing the RSS feed and have them on hand. (I though the nokia e71 may be a replacement for my n810 and phone but its pod cast plication and download speed made me feel like I would expect an XP user reacting to windows 3.1 would feel.) Canola must have memory leeks or use CPU when the device is unused my only problem is time to launch and i cant leave it running in the background as it flattens my battery. Download in the background while you brows the Internet- haven't seen a device that comes close to the n810, i do thin in windows all the time the n810 lets me download stuff and carry on with what I was doing, no need to single window. (I can also use my n810 as a computer with it comes to interacting with my download.) I never had or used a PMP, (other than palm OS as my audio book reader) so the N810 I though was fantastic for video, my only disappointment is not being able to play videos downloaded from www.ted.com without needing to convert them (a faster CPU would make it a little more smooth). But I have used it to entertain kids, keep me from sleeping on 24hr flights, I have found many ways to convert video and I love the fact I can circumvent DRP so I can future prof any content I deem fit for keeping. grab a few 8Gig Micro SD cards after converting you have a huge video library on hand. Browsing a windows network was a plus although I found it a bit slow to be useful. A BIG Bonus was ssh - for a person who needs a GUI I have leaned some thing just have to be and I have to change. SSH tunnelling wow, all the money I have spent setting up a VPN at work and home, only to discover ssh, it has proven to be the most reliable solution, after connecting to work via SSH VNC and RDP I have standardize on remote assess via SSH. - this SSH thing has probably been around a lot longer than May 2008 but I only just discovered it and now any device that docent sport SSH is a "Stone" (non option) SSH is ironical also the most eco-frendy program I run allowing me to send WOL commands to any PC I may interact with - the result is all PC's at work and home are off untill i want to acsess it (thanks to DDWRT and Qnap). RDP - thats also cool, I can use it to log into my PC my n810 is like a remote for my PC, just wish there was a way to press F11 to exist full screen as I find browsing in Fierfox on my PC via n810 way faster. after my n810 I can now remember IP addresses and not computer names. Wikipedia in my pocket at the diner table I love it, my kids know if they ask where does a cashew come from they will get an answer. I also love the VMGarnet. so i keep my contact there as. big screen and phone support and i will upgrade. that's it, Tim |
Re: The "Ecosystem": Why I can’t recommend an N8x0 or N900 to my friend
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I'm sorry if I sounded harsh or something... I agree fully with your overall point that the current tablets aren't really for your "normal," average user. I just thought some of your particular points weren't really fair. I also agree that the tablets were (relatively speaking) a marketing "flop". Nokia didn't know how to market them, and they really didn't do a great job aiming for any particular user group. I seriously hope that will change with the new device. All indications are that it will. |
Re: The "Ecosystem": Why I can’t recommend an N8x0 or N900 to my friend
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Re: The "Ecosystem": Why I can’t recommend an N8x0 or N900 to my friend
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Re: The "Ecosystem": Why I can’t recommend an N8x0 or N900 to my friend
From the bug:
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From the API refs: Quote:
:eek: |
Re: The "Ecosystem": Why I can’t recommend an N8x0 or N900 to my friend
Official landscape support only = the "N900" not being a phone for certain. If I have to use both hands for most tasks due to UI constraints, it's worthless as a phone.
Terrific. Another hope smashed - right in line with poorly executed Ovi services, Symbian/S60 v5 and its half-assed UI implementation, and the generally "a generation behind" hardware Nokia has planned for the next time... Seems like they need to have another <30% market share dip like in 2004 before they wake up... |
Re: The "Ecosystem": Why I can’t recommend an N8x0 or N900 to my friend
could be that the parts that do phone (dailer for instance), if any, is designed for portrait...
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Re: The "Ecosystem": Why I can’t recommend an N8x0 or N900 to my friend
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