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2008-08-13
, 14:15
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Posts: 883 |
Thanked: 980 times |
Joined on Jul 2007
@ Bern, Switzerland
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#12
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2008-08-13
, 15:10
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Posts: 37 |
Thanked: 5 times |
Joined on Feb 2007
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#13
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So while the N82 covers the "serious needs" on-the-go, the N810 is for "enjoyment and fun" while being settled a bit more.
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2008-08-13
, 15:15
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Posts: 127 |
Thanked: 11 times |
Joined on Mar 2008
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#14
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2008-08-13
, 15:16
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Posts: 127 |
Thanked: 11 times |
Joined on Mar 2008
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#15
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2008-08-13
, 15:44
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Posts: 1,436 |
Thanked: 3,144 times |
Joined on Jul 2005
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#16
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2008-08-13
, 16:09
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Posts: 63 |
Thanked: 5 times |
Joined on Sep 2007
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#17
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2008-08-13
, 16:24
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Moderator |
Posts: 7,109 |
Thanked: 8,820 times |
Joined on Oct 2007
@ Vancouver, BC, Canada
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#18
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2008-08-13
, 17:23
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Posts: 4,672 |
Thanked: 5,455 times |
Joined on Jul 2008
@ Springfield, MA, USA
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#19
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2008-08-13
, 17:58
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Posts: 643 |
Thanked: 628 times |
Joined on Mar 2007
@ Seattle (or thereabouts)
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#20
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Sorry I did not mean to sound as if I am thumbing my nose.
The N8XX is awesome however I became tired of needing 3 devices all the time. You all know we have an N8XX, laptop, and a cellphone. Now, with the N95, I only need a laptop.
Also, I am looking at a consumer device and not a hackable device I can code on. With my kids I only have time to keep up with learning the latest Oracle products and dev tools.
I will continue to visit here and was just kidding.
This stuff is all just a lifestyle choice anyway.
I definitely agree that whether the N8x0 is "the right device" for someone depends totally on what they need to accomplish and whether they have time to hack on it. For you, it's extraneous because you carry a phone and laptop anyways. For some people the N8x0 can actually replace their phone. For a lot of other people who use the N8x0 in a mobile situation it replaces their laptop. This is the situation I find myself in. For 90% of the things I would use a laptop for I can do on my N8x0 without having to sacrifice much. It has a web browser, email client, IM clients, and a terminal. When you get right down to it, that's all that I really need out of any machine. And it means I don't have to drag a multi-pound laptop around when I can slip my N800 into my pocket. The N800 isn't perfect of course, but I think that the little problems I have with it bother me so much because it is *so close* to being exactly the machine I need/want. This is starting to sound like an ad, so I think I'll quit now. :P
Symbian devices are very hard to program. Yes, you can run apps programmed in Python on them, but it's not like the N8x0 platform: for any complicated application, you gotta do C++. And that's hard. Even with the Carbide IDE and simulators, there's a steep curve to get applications to run. Also, there isn't the contributing community around Symbian devices as there is around Linux and Maemo.
So I'll stick with my N8x0 devices and keep hacking.