Rushmore
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2009-10-20
, 12:15
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Posts: 1,255 |
Thanked: 393 times |
Joined on Oct 2009
@ US
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#131
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2009-10-20
, 12:23
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Posts: 1,255 |
Thanked: 393 times |
Joined on Oct 2009
@ US
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#132
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2009-10-20
, 13:16
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Posts: 1,589 |
Thanked: 720 times |
Joined on Aug 2009
@ Arlington (DFW), Texas
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#133
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Nokia has been so ineffective at pulling it's N series devices out of the high end niche, I don't know if they'll pull it off, even if they have the conceptually more radical and innovative design.
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2009-10-20
, 13:19
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Posts: 968 |
Thanked: 974 times |
Joined on Nov 2008
@ Ohio
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#134
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2009-10-20
, 13:32
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Posts: 1,255 |
Thanked: 393 times |
Joined on Oct 2009
@ US
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#135
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As I've read through the thread, the following thought occurs to me (and I'm sure I'll be harshly corrected, but anyway).
Isn't Maemo, from the typical end-user perspective becoming more "closed"? (not from a developer, or even advanced user, but an end user).
For example: In Diablo, I can download a deb file, click on it from the stock filemanager, and it will install for me. In Fremantle, this is no longer the case. I have to drop into CLI to install a deb. Certainly, for devs and advanced users this is fine. However, it is not something the average end user would attempt. This was done to "protect" the end user from installing potentially harmful (beta, buggy, whatever) software easily. This limits the available software to the end user, in effect "closing" off part of the openness.
(I do agree that this is a good thing for the platform, but it does "close" it a little bit).
What would it be considered if in Maemo 7, a user would have to go to CLI to install a non-approved repository? (this logically following from protecting the end user from installing "bad" software that could make the experience less than optimal)
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2009-10-20
, 14:07
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Posts: 5,478 |
Thanked: 5,222 times |
Joined on Jan 2006
@ St. Petersburg, FL
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#136
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Isn't Maemo, from the typical end-user perspective becoming more "closed"? (not from a developer, or even advanced user, but an end user).
For example: In Diablo, I can download a deb file, click on it from the stock filemanager, and it will install for me. In Fremantle, this is no longer the case. I have to drop into CLI to install a deb. Certainly, for devs and advanced users this is fine. However, it is not something the average end user would attempt. This was done to "protect" the end user from installing potentially harmful (beta, buggy, whatever) software easily. This limits the available software to the end user, in effect "closing" off part of the openness.
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2009-10-20
, 17:56
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Posts: 1,245 |
Thanked: 421 times |
Joined on Dec 2005
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#137
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There's more to a system being open than simple visibility of the source code. The Android platform is designed to lock down the devices it runs on and prevent the user exercising their freedom to control their own device. The mere existence of the ADP1 as distinct from the G1 tells you how open Android is. There is no developer edition of Maemo because they're all open to development, or to anything else the user wants.
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2009-10-20
, 18:02
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Posts: 5,478 |
Thanked: 5,222 times |
Joined on Jan 2006
@ St. Petersburg, FL
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#138
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And how many manufacturers are building devices that run on Maemo? Maemo is awesome, but Nokia is the only manufacturer willing to gamble with it (and I respect them a great deal for that), and even then they're only gambling with one device at a time.
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2009-10-20
, 18:10
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Posts: 1,245 |
Thanked: 421 times |
Joined on Dec 2005
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#139
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2009-10-20
, 18:17
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Posts: 968 |
Thanked: 974 times |
Joined on Nov 2008
@ Ohio
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#140
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What are end users doing downloading random .debs off the internet? I don't know any end users who would choose to do that unless out of necessity and that necessity has decreased to almost zero over the past year or so. Random .debs are no longer the default for distributing software, sticking your stuff in Extras where it belongs is. This is really a red herring.
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Tags |
comparison, competition, droid, fight, milestone, motorola droid, motorola milestone, n900, nokia n900 |
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