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2009-12-24
, 17:07
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Posts: 3,428 |
Thanked: 2,856 times |
Joined on Jul 2008
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#42
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The Android VM, Python, Java, etc. do take resources but they give back portability and if you want to support multiple devices with multiple versions of an OS or even multiple OSs, it's worth the overhead. Nokia, with one OS on one device doesn't have to worry about this. . . . Yet.
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2009-12-26
, 10:08
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Posts: 21 |
Thanked: 12 times |
Joined on Aug 2009
@ Finland
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#43
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2009-12-26
, 10:22
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Posts: 319 |
Thanked: 289 times |
Joined on Sep 2009
@ Lisboa, Portugal
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#44
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Well have you seen same kind hype on N900 as iPhone? I think not. N900 is nerdy device and as a such there will be very little market share.
I'm not saying that we need 60 different in a year models from nokia like we used to. But it's really difficult to get good market share with only one device unless you have brainwashed cult behind you. Nokia is just too far away from that
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2009-12-29
, 01:03
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Posts: 3,319 |
Thanked: 5,610 times |
Joined on Aug 2008
@ Finland
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#45
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While theoretically true and, given current technology perhaps practically true, technology changes. There are phone CPUs today that run at 1GHz but it was only a few months ago that the N900, at 600MHz was the top of the heap. I wouldn't be surprised to see a CES announcement of a 1.5GHz processor and I wouldn't be surprised to see 2.0GHz shipping within the next year.
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2009-12-29
, 01:30
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Posts: 4,783 |
Thanked: 1,253 times |
Joined on Aug 2007
@ norway
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#46
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With more processor power comes more capability to handle overhead. Few would argue that the Maemo should eliminate a graphical interface and run everything from a command line but it would be faster (and that's how I used to dial my modem). For that matter, Maemo, even if it only ran a command line, is, like Linux itself, an unnecessary overhead. If you want speed, program in the CPU's assembler language.
The Android VM, Python, Java, etc. do take resources but they give back portability and if you want to support multiple devices with multiple versions of an OS or even multiple OSs, it's worth the overhead. Nokia, with one OS on one device doesn't have to worry about this. . . . Yet.