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2007-12-06
, 20:11
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Posts: 2,669 |
Thanked: 2,555 times |
Joined on Apr 2007
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#2
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2007-12-06
, 20:47
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Posts: 751 |
Thanked: 522 times |
Joined on Mar 2007
@ East Gowanus
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#3
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2007-12-06
, 20:59
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Posts: 2,669 |
Thanked: 2,555 times |
Joined on Apr 2007
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#4
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2007-12-06
, 21:58
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Posts: 428 |
Thanked: 54 times |
Joined on Mar 2006
@ Washington DC
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#5
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2007-12-06
, 22:25
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Posts: 49 |
Thanked: 6 times |
Joined on Nov 2007
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#6
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The tablets are going to end up being at the point you want them eventually, but not yet. It takes time to smooth things out. That's kind of the point of what Nokia stated when they said that we were at the 3rd of 5 steps towards having a more mainstream device.
In a few years, a combination of newer hardware, firmware updates, external projects and programmers brought into Nokia (like UKMP's programmer, who I'm not naming out of respect - because I just know I'm going to mess up his name).
When that happens, don't worry.. you'll get your sleek little iPhone-like interface that makes people ooooh and ahhhh over your tablet... while I cry over mine due to the same changes.
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2007-12-06
, 22:30
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Banned |
Posts: 138 |
Thanked: 1 time |
Joined on Jun 2007
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#7
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Nokia might be putting money into developing this thing (which is why people keep asking where the cell phone part is) but it is not part of their core business (yet). I don't see anyone b1itching about why the Asus EEE or the Pepper Pad doesn't have UTMS/EVDO/EDGE/HSDPA/WiMax along with WiFi.
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2007-12-06
, 22:41
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Posts: 751 |
Thanked: 522 times |
Joined on Mar 2007
@ East Gowanus
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#8
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The Following User Says Thank You to mobiledivide For This Useful Post: | ||
So I was about to walk out the door to go and play with the N810 tablet from the Nokia Flagship here in Manhattan and began looking up blogs talking about the device on technorati and came across this blog post.
. The authors statement about missed potential really struck a chord with me because the N800 is simply the best gadget that I have ever bought. Its influenced the way I see the software world (coming from a windows software development background) especially community developed projects. It has provided me with countless hours of entertainment through internet radio, rss and regular browsing. I have used it to take notes and record lectures in class without lugging a heavy laptop, I've taken it on vacation and used it to make international calls for free and used it to guide me through strange diverse locations from St Thomas USVI, to Montreal QC. The N810 is here now and I am about to buy it but....
I can't get rid of that nagging feeling of lost potential.
If the N810 had a module like the upcoming UMA/3G protocol which seamlessly switches from 3G to wifi then it would simply be the best pocketable telephony device out there.
If the N810 had an improved contacts system and even a rudimentary integrated PIM with support for iCal, Outlook etc this would be a perfect alternative to Winmo/Symbian/Palm. (Email will be fine once Modest hits).
If they could really get the whole community developed/corporate developed software environment perfected even if it consisted of quiet sponsorship of these cowboy single developer projects there would be probably a lot more stable hildonized apps for the ITOS.
There are all manner of hacks and add ons available which really gives us the consumer choice, but as another poster on this board said there is something to be said about simply being able to use the built in out of the box applications.
I got this way about Symbian S60 (longtime user since 3650) , I was constantly adding software and tinkering and playing to the point of bricking devices now I have only an activesync client added to the stock applications that ship with my N75.
I really want it to be that way with the N810. I want to get it, turn it on, and after setting up easy wizard-based *it just works* account settings I want to be able to send and receive email with attachments, chat on Gtalk with all my different IM accounts MSN, AIM, Yahoo, get video and audio from the internet either downloaded from RSS or from a directory, watch video from sources encoded with "iPod/PSP" format, make phone calls over VOIP or GSM. I want to be able to have a calendar and contacts system available system wide. I want to make video calls to people on PC's who are using iChat or Skype.
I want all this and I want it in a pleasant to use simple UI that my girlfriend can use without asking directions. She was able to navigate immediately with (can't believe I'm saying this
As far as I know this is ALL possible right now with the present hardware (apart from GSM phone call).
Polish and integrate GPE its a very usable Calendar, integrate Canola (their media player is the same as Mplayer), polish and integrate Modest, Abiword, Gnumeric. With that said keep the devices completely open, as much ridicule as it gets, the Red Pill, Blue Pill option was a neat way of separating the goats from the kids. Finally unify the UI of all the applications coming out of Nokia and above all make them a pleasure to use instead of just useful tools. Please explain if I am wrong.
Thanks for reading this book if you did, thank you community, thank you Nokia good luck with the restructuring next year, I'm off to go check out the N810 and N95-3