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#11
Hey guys, sorry I couldn't get back to you early, was busy with work :S

All your views seem very helpfully.

I am not selling the N800 and going for the N95 as a means of the N95 is "better". They both do very diffent things.

When I first got the N800 I was hoping that I could go around the whole of London, staying connected via the wifi spots and surf the web.
I don't mind the annoying boring aspect of installing apps etc but it's the lack on Nokia's side which I'm unhappy about with the N800.

To me, the N800 is used as an addon to your household, so you have the mobile phone, HTPC, wireless touchscreen remote and the N800 is something that would be by the sofa for quick logging on to the net.

I was hoping the webcam would have been MUCH more better in quality as it is very unsual as to why they didn't include even a 1.2 MP webcam

My final conclusion is that the Nokia N800 has a mass of potential but I don't think Nokia executed it right in the first place, they gave too much freedom to the Open Source community without establishing a solid foundation to build upon, it just feels like a project gone wrong!


The reasons why I want the N95 inplace of the N800 is firstly I have no mobile at the moment so I need that, 2ndly I was either thinking of buying a good quality digital camera or a mobile with a decent camera, as I can hack the cam drivers and tweak them hopefully and decrease JPEG compression and overexposure

If Nokia updated the Flash player, opera version, added better apps rather than old school PDA apps. Stuff like Canola should have been done by Nokia!

It's just too confusing for me to even think about lol., I'm so annoyed as to why they released something like this, and look at the price tag!!!!!! why is it so expensive?? what are we getting.. open source OS, barebone hardly anything provided, low grade camera, nasty interface and theres more and more lol WHY! :S

I think im just going to stay with the N95, and wait a few months, wait til something solid comes on the market.