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Wait..that's an N900, right?
the first thing i saw http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2010/...nokia/?pid=666
but then i saw this http://conversations.nokia.com/2010/...tre-cambridge/ and i was like Nokia can we get this ;) |
Re: Wait..that's an N900, right?
you can get it if you go there and swap your N900 for one of theirs
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Re: Wait..that's an N900, right?
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Re: Wait..that's an N900, right?
Chuck Norris wipes his *** with N900's, but predominantly with grizzly bears
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Re: Wait..that's an N900, right?
if Chuck wants that, Chuck gets that.
(and by the way, the "Nokia can we get this" is a joke) |
Re: Wait..that's an N900, right?
Stupid crap aside:
There was a thread on this earlier already: Yes, that is an N900 - there were other articles already linked to in other threads some time ago on this forum saying that that's what they were developing this stuff on - N900(s?) with modified screens with an extra layer that they passed the current through. |
Re: Wait..that's an N900, right?
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;) |
Re: Wait..that's an N900, right?
Electrifying the screen....if battery life wasn't an issue before, it sure will be now :/
I hope it eventually gets released as a kit to upgrade existing N900s, and i hope with a few software tweaks it still allows for electric shocks to be applied with the device, great anti-theft mechanism! :P |
Re: Wait..that's an N900, right?
By the time this gets mass-marketed, battery life and battery efficiency, storage capacity per size, and energy consumption in other components will be evened out enough that something like this will lead to approximately similar battery life, I suspect.
Plus, capacitive touch screens constantly run a current through them - that's how they sense touches - by detecting the current that's being passed through it change when a semi conducting surface/object (like a finger) touches them. As for a kit - as much as I would LOVE something like this, I highly highly doubt our N900s would get a kit for this. It's just... One, Nokia would have to mass produce half-sized batteries, and all the other prototypes. Two, the hardware is probably ridiculously technical, and connecting/wiring it would require soldering, most likely. (Extremely precise soldering, of parts barely humanly-reachable.) Three, Nokia will probably **** patents and trade secrets all over this stuff (start publicly pressuring them now, masses, and don't stop until this is out in handsets everywhere, and the technology is reasonably free of licensing fees), at least some of it, and if nothing else, phone makers today are not in the business of providing hardware upgrades, as shitty of a model as that is. |
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