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Re: Article to read, about E90 and Hildon.
Holy Crap thanks for the article I was almost about to hit the BUY button on the N95 after reading how Nokia works... I've just about emptied the shopping cart damit back to the drawing board I need something to replace my old Treo 650 which has kind of served me well minus the duplicate records and duplicat fields in contact info... ugh... why can't ONE COMPANY JUST GET IT RIGHT???
Apple for god sakes bring that freaking iPhone to Canada atleast I know it'll work with my Mac |
Re: Article to read, about E90 and Hildon.
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For an exec on the move, the ability to *receive* faxes could still be a big advantage. No doubt a third-party app will fill this void, but why force the user to go the third party route when Nokia already had it covered in the past? :) |
Re: Article to read, about E90 and Hildon.
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It's highly possible to be both savvy geek and successful businessman. California is full of them. Heck, so is Texas. |
Re: Article to read, about E90 and Hildon.
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To quote a good friend of mine who works in the DoD in the D.C. area: "Hi, I'm an information technology specialist. We run sh1t now." (It's a line from some movie as well I think) Maybe "businessmen" in the UK and Europe need handheld fax capability, but everywhere else I've been on the planet (Middle East, Africa, Asia, and the US) they want email and have ditched their fax machines for digital senders, namely HP's line of digital senders. I think I've setup a few hundred of those over the years. Face it, the ONLY reason folks want fax capability like that is to scan in a document and have it on their device. That's why digital senders are going to pretty much replace fax machines in ten years time. They eventually pay for themselves over time what with getting rid of a dedicated phone line and being able to scan in and eventually mass store paper documents. The BIGGEST complaints I've heard about portable devices have been in regards to digital signatures/signing/encryption support. Particularly the lack of "options" when it comes to hardware PKI tokens (read: smart cards) since right now the Blackberry has that one sewn up with the CAC sleds (both bluetooth and attached sleds). Nokia can hit it HUGE in the business world if they would just develop and market to the U.S. Government a bluetooth or attached smartcard reader sled for their E-series phones. Well, that and get their phones through the NSA testing process for supported encryption techniques. Because once you get the U.S. Gov, you get all those contracting companies as well....Northrupp Grumman, Boeing, DynaCorp, Halliburton, etc. As long as a device supports PKI functionality in addition to email, contacts, and calendar then the "businessmen" I work with are pretty frickin' ecstatic. And now I'm starting to get questions "about this VoIP thing on cell phones" since we're running VoIP at work now. (read: management looking to save a few extra bucks that better be going to my damned EOY bonus!) I got so many requests/questions about the iPhone that I basically wrote up a little internal memo and sent it around to everyone about how they will HATE an iPhone and what it DOESN'T offer them compared to their current phones. That pretty much killed their lust for it instantly. |
Re: Article to read, about E90 and Hildon.
@Millhouse,
As I mentioned a few pages back, digital scanner are coming on like gang busters. They provide the "faxing" capability that people still claim to need. At State, you see more DS (digital scanners) than fax machines. When I mentioned 3rd party apps filling the void, I was talking from the position that you will find better and more robust offerings than what Nokia would supply. You know that Nokia will only supply the cursory app with limited functionality. As I also mentioned, with the E90, you can now do everything on the outside of the phone that you could do on the inside. I wonder if S80 users are moaning about this handy feature. @iball maybe you have me on ignore or something, but you repeated pretty much what I said about sending docs, minus the PKI info. I have tried to import my dig cert into my N95 but it will not allow it. If Nokia could add this handy feature, we would be set. The govt, is using dig certs left and right now. Even their web sites are issuing tokens for verification. All web mail users have the little RSA (or some other brand) tokens to provide use authentication access. The developers of the E90 made a smart move in my opinion of dumping an app that for the most part is no longer needed and replacing them with wider device functionality. |
Re: Article to read, about E90 and Hildon.
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I found somewhere on the net a whole crapload of info on it, Google around. |
Re: Article to read, about E90 and Hildon.
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I personally think that moving from S80 to S60 was an *easy* decision, really, and certainly the right decision. The communicator line and S80 was stagnated into its own position. Differences between S80 and S60 weren't certainly trivial. Now, looking at E60, E61, E65, E90 all running essentially the same software platform, and running S60, makes it so much easier for software developers to make the decision to support it, instead of having to choose between S60 and S80. I don't see Nokia/ES management being "out of touch" with this issue at all. Talking on a general level, making features that a device with relatively limited popularity enjoy showstoppers - i.e. if the E90 wouldn't be able to come to the market without having those features - would really be a silly idea. S80 really enjoyed a very limited set of 3rd party software support - compared to S60 - at the end of the day. It's a long term move, but you should already easily see and understand the advantages of that move. |
Re: Article to read, about E90 and Hildon.
I still think the transition could have been managed better.
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