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How open are these phones?
My apologies if I come across as a n00b. That's probably because I am one. I owned a mobile phone very briefly for about 3 months a few years ago before giving it up completely. I'm actually a closet technophile, but the combination of bad phones, spammers, etiquette-unaware friends and family members, ******ed service providers and my own stubborn philosophies have made me shy away from the damn things.
Until now, that is. (I fancy I sound Jeremy-Clarkson-esque right about now) I like what I see with the N900 and the fact that it is running Maemo, a linux distribution, FOSS, scratch your itch and all that. But how much of this translates to the phone? So, my n00b questions:
Thanks in advance! |
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Thanks for the info! X |
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Re: How open are these phones?
Certainly SSH server on the device is a HUGE benefit. This gives you access to a remote terminal on the device but also implies SFTP, which lets you remotely access the files on your N900. With SFTP you can use Filezilla or Gnome's Nautilus (or other apps, I'm sure) to move files wirelessly -- and with a purty GUI -- knowing only the device address (IP, or domain if you've configured one for the network you plan to use).
This is one area openness shines. In fact, I can't wait to see what the crazy kids here cook up with dynamic dns and 3G. For example, it's not out of the question to run a simple web server from your N900 regardless of where you are! Why? Not sure. YARR! }:^)~ |
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boa is a web server for embedded devices though I'm not sure how it's doing for security. |
Re: How open are these phones?
Yeah hopefully it won't be long before Mer, Android, etc. are ported but it may take a long time.
There are hardware-related cut-offs as far as new OS releases go. You should be able to connect via USB, wifi, 3G, bluetooth and maybe even ethernet (from the community anyway) SSH rocks. Give sshfs a spin. Should be able to use/run no-ip or other for the dynamic IP thing. The N95 supports web servers. Could use Google Voice # for white-listing. Used to be able to get carriers to disable SMS but they are a bit more persistent now. I tried disabling data on my phone (there is a dedicated button to launch the web browser which I keep pressing - it happens to be enter if on any non-"home" screen) and they told me data was linked to SMS. This is something to take up with your cellular carrier. I also recommend giving people your GV # that way you can control the specifics. SSH, VNC. etc. There are plenty of tutorials, wiki, etc. for existing NITs. And there will many more after the N900 is released. |
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YARR! }:^)~ |
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You can easily use rsync + SSH for backups. Plus something like Rsnapshot, or Fly Back ('Time Machine for Ubuntu'). But you could run this on the N900 hence not requiring a SSH server. Quote:
Proxy/BNC which can be connected to from desktop or NIT. Synchronisation of browser, PIM, mail, user data (rsync), ... |
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Thanks everybody!
As for Google voice, I ain't in the USofA :( |
Re: How open are these phones?
You aren't in the US? So? There are workarounds you know. Obviously the free calls are to US [and Canada] or from. But some VOIP makes all the difference.
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