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2009-06-07
, 07:23
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Posts: 36 |
Thanked: 15 times |
Joined on Apr 2008
@ London
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#42
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No, the media player has a crawler that scans your cards for you and adds anything it finds to your library. It should work automatically in the background (unless you manually disable it because you use another media player anyway)...
This isn't really fair either. You don't have to add Extras, you just have to enable it in the Application Manager. And it is pretty straightforward to do that.
That's not a very good example. Tech enthusiasts will figure out how to hack rotation onto their device (well, they will if they know how to search the forums)
but OS2008 isn't really set up for portrait mode; it would require a complete reconfiguration of the home screen and the application menu. The "ready-made code" doesn't address this large and complex issue at all. No, official rotation support requires lots of work on Nokia's part, and without the hardware (ie an accelerometer to detect physical device rotation), it understandably wasn't really worth it to them.
Hopefully my link above will help that situation for you! It includes a custom kernel that has rotation and faster SD card access. (Install Advanced Backlight for a nice rotation button right on the task bar)
Try one of the several excellent YouTube players available in Extras, like MyTube and (so I hear) Digia @scene. I use MyTube all the time, it does a great job. The iPhone uses a dedicated youtube client, too. It's the best way to do mobile video. browser-embedded Flash video is just too resource hungry for this generation of ARM processors.
They didn't put it on a CD, but a quick Google shows you that Nokia made one... Seriously, it's the first hit on a search for "tablet video converter"! And if you don't have the Internet, then why are you buying an Internet Tablet?
There are better third party converters, anyway. They aren't too hard to find, either.
Wrong again. If you buy an OTG adapter the tablets work just fine as an OTG host without any hacks at all. You just plug and play. USB flash drives and USB keyboards both work just fine, again with no hacks.
And don't say that Nokia should have included the adapter in the box, it is part of the USB OTG standard, and most people wouldn't use it. Most printers don't even come with the ($2) USB cable!
The Following User Says Thank You to qviri For This Useful Post: | ||
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2009-06-07
, 09:00
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Posts: 352 |
Thanked: 231 times |
Joined on Jul 2008
@ Vancouver
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#43
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2009-06-08
, 03:23
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Moderator |
Posts: 7,109 |
Thanked: 8,820 times |
Joined on Oct 2007
@ Vancouver, BC, Canada
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#44
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Unfortunately, I just timed it now - 58 seconds before Tear was done loading and rendering facebook.com... I do however have to say the iphone version loads acceptably fast and everything works, including photo albums which were iffy at best in MicroB. Hooray for Webkit.
Again, however, your ordinary user isn't going to just realise they should search these forums for "Tear".... Nevertheless, I'm seeing a lot that still rules out "normal" users, and for the more advanced folk, I'm still concerned that Nokia isn't really sure what they want to do with the tablets themselves. If they are, they're not really doing a good job showing it as far as I can see. (And feel free to prove me wrong... I want that excuse to buy shiny N810 goodness.)
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2009-06-09
, 04:27
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Posts: 36 |
Thanked: 15 times |
Joined on Apr 2008
@ London
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#45
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I am a little puzzled by your numbers, actually. I just tested Facebook in MicroB and it took 43 seconds from hitting the Login button to the completion of my home page. I wonder why it is faster for me?
I agree fully with your overall point that the current tablets aren't really for your "normal," average user. I just thought some of your particular points weren't really fair.
I seriously hope that will change with the new device. All indications are that it will.
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2009-06-09
, 11:19
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Posts: 1,665 |
Thanked: 1,649 times |
Joined on Jun 2008
@ Praha, Czech Republic
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#46
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I'm really looking forward to rotation in Maemo 5... The whole interface is being designed with rotation in mind.
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2009-06-09
, 18:16
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Moderator |
Posts: 7,109 |
Thanked: 8,820 times |
Joined on Oct 2007
@ Vancouver, BC, Canada
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#47
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This has been closed internally as WONTFIX and the internal comment is "Portrait mode is not fully supported. Applications are expected to use landscape only UI, or if they insist on portrait, then fix all the problems by themselves on the app side (e.g by creating plain GtkDialogs with empty action area)."
Hildon is optimized for a landscape screen orientation. Although both orientations are supported, framework level functionalities such as the status bar, back/close, are not available on the portrait mode...
The portrait mode is meant to be a one-hand special usage mode. Limited functionalities should still be given to this mode. For example, a Now Playing message for a media application, a read view for a PDF reading application, or limited call handle controls.
System notifications, error messages and progress indicators are only displayed in the landscape orientation. Apart from incoming calls, in this mode no other notifications are displayed on the screen. Instead, the other notifications are indicated by sound, vibration or LED.
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2009-06-09
, 19:53
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Posts: 137 |
Thanked: 138 times |
Joined on Sep 2007
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#48
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The Following User Says Thank You to chlettn For This Useful Post: | ||
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2009-06-10
, 04:05
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Posts: 362 |
Thanked: 109 times |
Joined on May 2009
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#50
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Official landscape support only = the "N900" not being a phone for certain. If I have to use both hands for most tasks due to UI constraints, it's worthless as a phone.
Terrific.
Another hope smashed - right in line with poorly executed Ovi services, Symbian/S60 v5 and its half-assed UI implementation...
I'm really looking forward to rotation in Maemo 5... The whole interface is being designed with rotation in mind.
There are better third party converters, anyway. They aren't too hard to find, either.
It is just difficult to find an OTG host adapter because there are almost no mobile devices on the market that can be OTG hosts, so there's no market for the adapters. But I got one for my N800 for about $10.
And don't say that Nokia should have included the adapter in the box, it is part of the USB OTG standard, and most people wouldn't use it. Most printers don't even come with the ($2) USB cable!
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