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Openness: Maemo vs Android
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Thoughts? |
Re: Openness: Maemo vs Android
Whoever wrote that deserves an award.
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Re: Openness: Maemo vs Android
Well yeah kind of no brainer :D
Answer to this will be seen in 1-2 years |
Re: Openness: Maemo vs Android
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If you (or anyone) is/are suggesting the above post deserves an award for helping educate the community about important issues, I agree with you. But in no way do I care about an award for pointing out Nokia's "bad habits". Nokia, like any company, has shortcomings. But Nokia is the only company that has been willing to offer the consumer a phone/pocket computer device with official root access! (No need to jailbreak and take all those risks.) Nokia is the only company that backs up their vision of openness by actually delivering a product that embodies the ideals. (Read the link above for full details.) I feel that it is up to us to shape our future. Stop playing victim. We are not simply victims of Nokia's past mistakes. This is especially true now that Maemo/N900 are out. We have an open platform right now -- some of us have it in our hands. The way we use and support this platform will do a lot of determine Nokia's future direction with it. None of us need to be captive, powerless consumers now that Nokia has taken the initiative to empower us. We can take this opportunity and run with it. We can do that through our purchase decisions. We can do it in the way we educate others about what to expect from the N900 and how to use it. Those of us who can afford it can donate to the community. (We could donate devices or money or something else.) Many of us can do development work. Others can be evangelists. Some of us can be critics too, but it needs to be constructive criticism. (If you have a problem, state it clearly and state what your desired solution would be. Then ask for help and offer what is needed to get people motivated to provide that help.) Purchasing an N900 can be a statement about one's sophisticated understanding of personal freedoms in the technology age. Or it can be a much more shallow statement. If you own (or will soon purchase) an N900, think about what your role will be. Will you be one who doesn't understand the opportunities available to us and who therefore risks letting them slip away? Or will you be one who is an ambassador of open source? |
Re: Openness: Maemo vs Android
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I used to have a need to carry device that reflects my philosophies on software control. Then I grew up. The people I work on would prefer I have access to Epocrates rather than to show my personal philosophies on technology with my choice of device. So if anybody thinks this platform means a damn in the world - make it useful to people in their daily tasks. Otherwise it is useful only to open-source chest-thumper nerds. |
Re: Openness: Maemo vs Android
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Re: Openness: Maemo vs Android
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Somehow, using open source as my primary platform for almost everything I do for work - for the last 20 years - has been pretty good for my career. For me, having an open source phone is a smart choice. It means I'll be able to make the phone do things which are useful to me. A closed phone doesn't offer that. The iPhone was shiny, but I couldn't see the point in getting one. Don't see how I'd find it useful - most of the apps I want to run are open source. Especially the productivity apps - which is sort of the point of a device like this, isn't it? |
Re: Openness: Maemo vs Android
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You probably mean the phone's operating system is open source. Or even better: You want to mean that Maemo is Free Software. As " open source " doesn't necessarily mean you are free to redistribute any changes to it as you like. Seriously, you've been an OSS developer for 20 years: and make basic mistakes like this and : "I'll be able to make the phone do things which are useful to me" Even a Wintel is not open source, but still it's sort of an open development platform, as anyone can write and publish software for it and make the computer do what is useful to people. |
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If pushed on philosophy I'm more aligned with Free Software, but I use the term Open Source because it's more widely familiar and less prone to misinterpretation by those who don't already know better. Quote:
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An ordinary computer does not enable me to do the things I want to do with Maemo. It is the fact that it's a phone, a phone-sized computer small enough to have on me at all times, and an openly programmable platform, which makes all the difference to my "useful". Symbian's supposed to be open enough to write your own apps, but you know, I could never install any non-commercial software on the Symbian phones I've had because of DRM lockouts. iPhone is obviously out, and Android is a mixed bag which was just that little bit too closed for me. |
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