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Re: Where are all the MeeGo tablets?
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I assumed you were talking about nvidia and ati on desktops. Quote:
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Re: Where are all the MeeGo tablets?
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This isn't to say that you CANNOT use 3D to do this... I'm just saying that you don't 100% NEED 3D to do this even with acceleration and resizing. |
Re: Where are all the MeeGo tablets?
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Re: Where are all the MeeGo tablets?
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What is the point of labelling meego as open source when the devices that include meego parts are shrouded by closed source drivers for components within every single device meego has ever had anything to do with. Only one way meego could be open source and that is for it to be applied to a NON closed device and upto now that has never ever happened and probably never will. momcilo actually talks it the way it is unlike the blinkered people on here. |
Re: Where are all the MeeGo tablets?
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Re: Where are all the MeeGo tablets?
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Re: Where are all the MeeGo tablets?
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Already you can see netbooks and tablets which lack the some legacy traits, such as connectors, ability to increase ram, or exchange storage. And the move by AMD to fuse the CPU and GPU on the same die. I think in a way, to save power you need smaller parts (nm), slower parts (undervolt), less parts (more components withing a single chip), and more parts (ie cores). I think the ball is really in Intel's court, if they can utilize their expertise and get closer to ARM's layout, they stand to gain the most out of MeeGo. And that's the truth to the matter, NOKIA never needed Maemo nor MeeGo and had very little to do with the platform. Symbian was their bread and butter, and the entire 5 years that's what they focused on. Android was their biggest competitor, not Apple, and they failed to adapt and lost. Nokia was hoping Intel's strategy for next-generation cores was closer than expected (by mid-2011), which would mean Intel would have needed to complete the MeeGo-Project by 2010. Obviously there was delays back in mid-2010 on Intel's side, and Nokia chose to let Intel find the solution; disregarding its own base (Symbian developers). And this was the fatal blow to Nokia, they lost communication within the board, and failed to acknowledge that a failure of MeeGo would mean a failure to Nokia's roadmap. Which is why the board took the best option they had, they f*cked Microsoft, and now hope to re-enter the market. Year(s) later Chipzilla would overtake the market and cause the big ARMvsX86 deathmatch, at which point Intel would use the expertise they gained from MeeGo, perhaps displaying a truly polished operating system, which would make "analysts" think Nokia made a bad decision by reverting from MeeGo to Windows Phone, when it is actually the right decision. |
Re: Where are all the MeeGo tablets?
Reverting from MeeGo to Windows is a bad decision. Windows Phone is dead, and Nokia is dead with it.
Microsoft doesn't care -- in two years they will abandon the current incarnation of Windows Phone only to move on to their 'next best thing', Windows TabPhone XP 11 or something. Microsoft has been doing this for the last 15 years already, and they can easily continue doing the same for the next 15. Nokia doesn't have two years to play along with Microsoft experiments. In two years Nokia will be bankrupt or bought out. Quote:
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Re: Where are all the MeeGo tablets?
I'm with tkatchev. Considering how many years Microsoft has burned their customers and distributors and even the salespeople who were told that THIS time Windows Mobile will be a hot seller... no wait... THIS TIME FOR SURE! Okay okay okay... THIS time! ...Microsoft's mobile strategy is hardly a good decision from top-to-bottom. It's already proven to be a losing strategy and I can't see how Nokia will be any better off for it.
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Re: Where are all the MeeGo tablets?
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Who's to say it would be different this time? Android 2.3 on my Desire HD is actually pretty zippy compared to iOS 5 beta on my 3GS. WP7 Mango on my HD2 OTOH is a huge POS. |
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