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Re: New review on Engadget
Engadget does not like Nokia. They made it pretty clear during a mobile summit when they spoke with Jon Rubinstein.
Watch for yourself - Start at 55 mins... http://www.engadget.com/2009/09/17/t...er-ipod-event/ I would would expect nothing but a bash from these guys. |
Re: New review on Engadget
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To me the lack of call and end buttons is the biggest stumbling block. It's almost as if Nokia deliberately left out a couple features found on the N97/N97-mini, so they wouldn't be too much in competition with each other. It also would have made a lot of sense to have the same tilt up screen sliding form factor on the N900. |
Re: New review on Engadget
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I for one find accelerometer based re-orientation very irritating most of the time and am pretty sure I will find it's absence refreshing. |
Re: New review on Engadget
Omg, not all reviewers out there have to take the same stance as Nokia fanboys, y'know..
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Re: New review on Engadget
honest question: why do you guys NEED a hardware call and end call button?
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Re: New review on Engadget
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You know, why have any dedicated buttons for anything? Unlock? The camera? Volume rocker? It's just about a certain basic level of convenience for basic functions. I still consider the phone to be one of the most basic elements of a phone. It's a little bit like professional video cameras (or still cameras for that matter). They have lots of dedicated buttons and switches. It's low end cameras that are completely driven by an on-screen interface. A lot of people find interacting with a screen for every function less useable. Anyway, that's my preference. |
Re: New review on Engadget
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Re: New review on Engadget
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Re: New review on Engadget
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Using the finger: HAVE scratched it, due to a corn of sand on the screen. Would have seen it, except there was a big finger in the way, pressing it down. Also, makes the device full of finger fat, eww. The N810 isn't the easiest to clean either, with the immersed screen. Using the nail: No scratches, no smudges. And much more accurate. Styluses, nails and toothpicks FTW. Srsly. For twenty years I've been telling people not to finger my PC screens, and all of a sudden, a screen that's not full of finger marks is considered old fashioned? Get your fatty fingers off my screen! Consider what you're doing to your eyes, reading blurry screens... I prefer a clean, non-fatty screen over designer glasses, any day. ;) |
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