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Re: Using "Its not a phone!" to sidestep lack of features
Please read the ocumentation correctly on the Nokia site. Everything, inluding the N810, N800 and N770 are listed in phones section as Nokia doesn't have another section. This one has been gone over several times in the past with numerous threads. The other bit you might have missed is the numerous references to the fact that this is a device for early adopters and not intended as a mass market device yet.
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Re: N900 is not a phone ! Why people still don't get it?
The thread "Using "Its not a phone!" to sidestep lack of features" with one post has been merged into this thread.
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Re: Using "Its not a phone!" to sidestep lack of features
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Taken from the N900 product page for the US site: http://store.nokia.com/webapp/wcs/st...na-fd_n900_001 Online Store Nokia N900 Experience the speed and raw power of the high-performance N900 mobile computer. Quick facts extreme speed and performance keep your conversation going Coming from a DROID, and still having a Moto Q, the 900 had almost as much utility, if not more, out of the box than both of the others. I don't know of any that have built-in SIP clients and direct dial out of contacts, via multiple methods, like the 900 has. As a "phone", the 900 does "more" than my previous smartphones. Sorry its not working for you. Now I do wish it had some of the Touc Pro 2's conference and speed dialing features, but the TP2 is a different beast altogether. |
Re: Using "Its not a phone!" to sidestep lack of features
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Re: N900: The Great "It's a phone!" vs. "It's not a phone; it's a mobile computer!" Debate
I don't have the time to read this entire thread so if this analogy has been used sue me. But there are netbooks and laptops that have a cellular radio. Doesn't make them phones. The N900 is whatever Nokia wants it to be. Designed for someone just like me; I hardly ever make calls, so all those features people expect are abstract to me.
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Re: N900: The Great "It's a phone!" vs. "It's not a phone; it's a mobile computer!" Debate
okay - honestly - what is the difference between an iPhone and an N900?
They both run a Unix variant iPhone can't multitask 3rd party software - N900 can iPhone does not have XTerminal iPhone is a "closed" platform - N900 is open (kind of) iPhone might not do flash in the browser - who cares? Most of the things you need flash for - have dedicated iPhone applications (youtube, Hulu (announced), iplayer) N900 cant connect to VPN (unless you are a Linux geek - and mind setting up certificates and complex scripts) iPhone can connect to many kinds of VPN - right out of the box. N900 has hardware keyboard - iPhone has software keyboard - they both work fine - and I can type about the same speed on both. But apart from the above they are pretty damn close. Hardware is not far apart and base OS is not really that far apart either. Both have okay processors - mediocre cameras, GPS, lots of storage, works as video players, both syncs with Exchange (N900 is a bit crippled compared to iPhone in that respect) Why I have N900? SIP client (like WinMo have as standard, or S60 has as standard) So guys - what is the difference? Why is one a mobile computer and the other "just a smartphone"? Cut the crap - both devices are cut from the same sheet of Electronics Design paper with very little difference in specs. N900 has it good point - but so does the iPhone. The worst thing about the N900 is that the phone implementation - made by one of the LARGEST companies making phones - is so badly made. No even up to Nokia 3100 standards. Remember Windows CE - started out a bit like N7xx/N800 as a PDA device. No Phone implemented. Then HP/Compaq made a Phone Jacket you could plug your iPaq into - and then it was a phone. (that was about 8 year ago) Should we compare the N900 with the iPaq with a Phone Jacket? No not really - but actually the Phone Jacket for the iPaq was a more complete phone implementation than what Nokia has delivered with the N900. So stop *****ing at each other - start asking Nokia nicely to make a better Phone implementation you can be proud of - and have the best Multimedia Computer Phone money can buy. If the Phone implementation was up to usual Nokia standards - then this discussion would never have taken place. But Nokia has been lazy and to quick to put the N900 onto the market - and everyone who bought the THING based on Nokias advertising is the looser. The N7xx/N8xx are winners because they know where the N900 comes from and had lower expectations. But every High end device from Nokia the past few years has been promoted as a "mobile computer" to begin with incl. both E90 and N97. So why should the N900 be different? |
Re: N900 is not a phone ! Why people still don't get it?
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Having a Motorola Q for the past 2 years, and returning my 2nd Droid after 3 weeks, as a VoIP engineer, the 900 is a Godsend for me. The built-in SIP client alone makes it more of a "phone" than my other two devices. Aside from my USB port coming completely detached, having the 900 has been an issue free experience as far as browsing, email, and calls (save for call volume being on the low side). FWIW, the 900's email client is flawless compared to the Droid's native email apps (both Exchange and POP3)...talk about issues. I kinda agree with you on the battery...but going into it, I didn't expect much more than a day given the 900's mAh rating, which is about what I'm getting now. All those issues were solved via an extended Seidio battery for the other phones. |
Re: N900 is not a phone ! Why people still don't get it?
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Re: N900: The Great "It's a phone!" vs. "It's not a phone; it's a mobile computer!" Debate
I know its a phone, but when I'm playing mario 64, watching movies, or when I remote desktop into my home pc, ect...
and then someone calls..... in intensive apps the screen kinda stops for a couple secs and I get that weird feeling like "Oh yeah, i forgot its a phone too." |
Re: N900: The Great "It's a phone!" vs. "It's not a phone; it's a mobile computer!" Debate
It looks like one, it's priced like one, it's made to compete in the same segment as all the others.
It's a smartphone. |
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