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2014-12-07
, 06:08
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Posts: 1,082 |
Thanked: 1,235 times |
Joined on Apr 2010
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#31
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feature phone is thicker, wider, and taller than my previous Motorola Razr. The Tablet I currently own is a Samsung Galaxy Note 8.0 which I bought for the form factor, Ir blaster and Active Digitizer pen as a replacement for my HTC Flyer. The HTC Flyer was getting old in terms of both hardware and software features being stuck on Honeycomb, but there were no real replacements as 7" tablets had been relegated to the low end and the 7" offerings were low end at best. If I wanted the stylus and the high end features simply put there were no real choices. The HTC Flyer I owned I bought as a replacement for my Archos 5. The Archos 5 became outdated from an OS perspective being stuck on Android 1.6 cupcake and the LCD got damaged so I looked for a replacement. I liked the Archos 5 for the resistive touchscreen enabling stylus use, having Android plus linux in the form of angstrom, high storage capacity, and not having to buy it on contract or buying something that was 400+ dollars unlocked. When I looked to replace my Archos 5 there were no replacements, 5" tablets/UMPCS/MIDS died as a product category and phones became 5" and tablets became 7". So my only real choice was as a replacement was a 7" tablet. Now 8" are being relegated to the low end and being replaced by 8 - 9". I won't use any tablet larger than 8" as 8" is the maximum of pocketable. The trend is similar with laptops. 7-10" Laptops used to be the very low end being netbooks, 11.6 -12.5" laptops being ultraportables, 13 - 14" being mainstream with some higher performance options, 15.6" - 17" being very high end performance. Now 10" or smaller netbooks have disappeared, 11.6" laptops have been relegated to the low end replacing netbooks, 12.5 -14" is now the ultraportable form factor with fewer higher performance options, 15.6" has become the mainstream form factor with some higher performance options and 17" has become a niche. The smallest ultraportable is now 12.5" or a 12.1" or smaller tablet with a core i5. In short each generation of devices I have has gotten an inch or two bigger with each generation. I might just keep my Core i5 Acer v5-171 running Ubuntu and My Samsung Galaxy Note 8.0 for as long they can last, I have no reason to replace either technology wise (until the next processor architecture change any ways), both devices are in reasonable shape and nothing has come out that can truly replace either in terms of both form factor or functionality. The problem is that even though laptops, tablet, and phones are thinner they are footprint wise bigger and are thus less portable. Device manufactures seems to forget the importance of portability.| The Following User Says Thank You to railroadmaster For This Useful Post: | ||
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2014-12-07
, 08:45
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Posts: 102 |
Thanked: 171 times |
Joined on Nov 2014
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#32
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2014-12-07
, 14:34
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Posts: 1,048 |
Thanked: 1,127 times |
Joined on Jan 2010
@ Amsterdam
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#33
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2014-12-07
, 14:53
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Posts: 1,746 |
Thanked: 1,832 times |
Joined on Dec 2010
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#34
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Slightly off topic:
Anyone else here, that had the feeling that Gnome3 somewhat resembles the way Hildon-desktop works?
I used to dislike the whole new "idiom", beit Unity, Gnome3 or whatever. So I stuck to Gnome2 and Awesome, untill last month, when I finally made the switch to Gnome Shell.
After a week or so, it dawned to me, that the way we go to applications and multitask-view on the N900 is very similar to the procedure in Gnome3. You press a "hotspot" once (top-left) and it will bring you to your opened applications, press it twice it'll bring you your applications list.
I suppose Unity also resembles that, but Hildon is part of Gnome, if I'm not mistaken, so it made me wonder to what extent, if any, Hildon influenced or inspired Gnome3.
Anyone else with Gnome3 experience and thoughts on it?
/off topic
| The Following User Says Thank You to m4r0v3r For This Useful Post: | ||
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2014-12-07
, 15:59
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Posts: 1,048 |
Thanked: 1,127 times |
Joined on Jan 2010
@ Amsterdam
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#35
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Am tempted to buy the surface pro, stick ubuntu on and put gnome 3 onto it, thats a win right there.
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2014-12-09
, 00:06
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Posts: 1,746 |
Thanked: 1,832 times |
Joined on Dec 2010
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#36
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Hmm. I'm not so sure about that combination. The thing that won me over for Gnome3, the same thing I had overlooked when I first disgarded it, is the use of keyboard shortcuts. It makes operating the desktop amazingly quick, to the point it can compete with something like a well configured E16 (Enlightenment) desktop. I have trouble seeing how a virtual keyboard would give me that experience.
That being said, lots of people seem to enjoy keyboardless devices, so my judgement holds no more value than that: I'd find it difficult to work with, I guess.
I have an Archos tablet idly laying around because of it.
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2014-12-11
, 06:07
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Posts: 992 |
Thanked: 738 times |
Joined on Jun 2010
@ Low Earth Orbit
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#37
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| The Following 11 Users Say Thank You to kureyon For This Useful Post: | ||
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2014-12-12
, 05:12
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Posts: 1,789 |
Thanked: 1,699 times |
Joined on Mar 2010
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#38
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| The Following User Says Thank You to Kangal For This Useful Post: | ||
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2014-12-12
, 07:30
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Posts: 6,446 |
Thanked: 20,981 times |
Joined on Sep 2012
@ UK
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#39
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2014-12-12
, 09:52
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Posts: 671 |
Thanked: 1,630 times |
Joined on Aug 2010
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#40
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Am tempted to buy the surface pro, stick ubuntu on and put gnome 3 onto it, thats a win right there.
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