![]() |
Re: Where is Nokia - no announcement no product - still in hibernation
Quote:
Quote:
|
Re: Where is Nokia - no announcement no product - still in hibernation
Quote:
The cohesive community: from talking to doing |
Re: Where is Nokia - no announcement no product - still in hibernation
Quote:
If you insist, Skype works on J2ME. When you say iPhone-like you really say you want the UI to work more intuitive. See for (fictional) examples http://tabletui.wordpress.com Quote:
|
Re: Where is Nokia - no announcement no product - still in hibernation
Quote:
You're talking for instance about navigating in menus. That assumes that there is a focus element on screen. Look at the iPhone UI, for instance. There is no focus element there. For a proper touch UI, you shouldn't have a focus element. A traditional UI style is to have focus elements and then means to move this focus element around; first click to move the focus to position on screen, second click to confirm. Another style is to have no focus on lists and menus: first click always selects whatever you click. But you can't really mix these styles together very well. The current S60 touch UI does this, and I'm not sure that people are very pleased with the results. (Blackberry Storm tries to do this half-child of pressing lightly focusing and pressing heavily activating, but that's slightly hackish.) There are major implications to whether you have an UI that supports a focus element or then not. Take an example... for instance, of a file manager style application: content list on screen, toolbar on screen. If you have a focus, you can click on an element and then choose a command from the toolbar. If you have no focus, then you cannot do UI's like that, but must set the commands differently. Or take another example from the S60 UI designs. They have the Options menu for commands for the focused item. It's essentially the same as the toolbar: the first click cannot activate an item, because the user must be able to click once to select item, then press Options to get commands for the focused item. It makes good sense for HW keys, but not really for touch screens. The more you try to stick on to hard key based navigation, the less you can optimize for touch UI's. It's really that simple, fortunately or unfortunately. |
Re: Where is Nokia - no announcement no product - still in hibernation
Quote:
Oddly enough though, despite it's size, I'd still buy it. :) Assuming of course it runs Linux obviously. ;) |
Re: Where is Nokia - no announcement no product - still in hibernation
Quote:
There are some things a touchscreen is not suited for. |
Re: Where is Nokia - no announcement no product - still in hibernation
Quote:
2) Well, touch screens work well with games suitable for touch screens. Just like you wouldn't enjoy Civilization with only HW keys (well, some do!), you wouldn't probably enjoy Quake with only the touch screen. |
Re: Where is Nokia - no announcement no product - still in hibernation
a touch screen and accelerometer (if device includes everything from rx-51) allows interaction in a different way to old mouse+keyboard indirect interfacing.
I'm not gonna be so worried if we have no dpad on the [***front of the] next device, the menu and desktop ui wont need it and im sure that the accelerometer can be made to control things like doom in a new and better way than ever before. its just different, not worse. ***i expect a hardware keyboard though and this still needs dpad (ala n97) |
Re: Where is Nokia - no announcement no product - still in hibernation
Quote:
Still, the hard keys are a great tool when using the device on the go, so I hope they're not abandoned altogether even if the d-pad has to go. |
Re: Where is Nokia - no announcement no product - still in hibernation
Quote:
I read the screen and I tap the screen, I don't touch the screen. I occasionally use my left thumb nail and I occasionally use my right index nail. And if the microb menu and toolbar were better designed I probably wouldn't have to use any nail. With the n800 in my left hand (right hand holding, say, a cup of coffee) I can control everything with my thumb and index finger without obscuring/smudging the screen. An iPhone, Palm Pre or [insert other sh*tty device here] takes 2 hands or the screen is thumb-obscured. Just plain dumb. Thus, made for sheep. And an accelerometer for use in video games on this platform? I have an iron constitution but this would even give me motion sickness. While I'm Sitting Down! Currently, this is my favorite example of technology abuse. Can you imagine watching an F1 race with your 50" plasma tilting back and forth? Voice recognition isn't an option either. I read in silence; my own included. That's why I own this ARM device. In fact, I might just be one rev C away from buying a Beagle Board so I can start replacing all my x86 computers. Silence, for me, is platinum. Bring back the n800 control layout or design something better, but please don't make me touch the screen. Pretty please with sugar on top. |
All times are GMT. The time now is 12:05. |
vBulletin® Version 3.8.8