I have the Nokia N770 and I like it, its almost perfekt.
But after I upgraded to the newest version of Maemo 2006 the sampling frequency of the touchscreen seems to be much slower. I find that very anoying, cause I like to write note using MaemoPad+ and after the upgrade writing is much more difficult. Every sign has corners, every curve has corners... thats just a bit damn.
I think they did that because of the useability of the scrollbars. The scrollbars in Maemo2.0 were too sensible, so that the opera browser was scrolling (flickering) all the time when you just hold the position of the pointer at one place.
I didn't like the behaviour of the old scrollbars. However I really liked the speed of the touchscreen and I want that feature back. (So I'll ignore the scrolling issue)
Can anyone help me with this? I searched the forum for some time, but I didn't find anything that fits to this problem.
ps. I just saw (a second ago) that 2.2 is released, Ill try that this week end but maybe anyone can help anyways.
I have the Nokia N770 and I like it, its almost perfekt.
But after I upgraded to the newest version of Maemo 2006 the sampling frequency of the touchscreen seems to be much slower. I find that very anoying, cause I like to write note using MaemoPad+ and after the upgrade writing is much more difficult. Every sign has corners, every curve has corners... thats just a bit damn.
I think they did that because of the useability of the scrollbars. The scrollbars in Maemo2.0 were too sensible, so that the opera browser was scrolling (flickering) all the time when you just hold the position of the pointer at one place.
I didn't like the behaviour of the old scrollbars. However I really liked the speed of the touchscreen and I want that feature back. (So I'll ignore the scrolling issue)
Can anyone help me with this? I searched the forum for some time, but I didn't find anything that fits to this problem.
ps. I just saw (a second ago) that 2.2 is released, Ill try that this week end but maybe anyone can help anyways.
Thank you,
Timo