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2007-05-04
, 07:21
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Posts: 2,152 |
Thanked: 1,490 times |
Joined on Jan 2006
@ Czech Republic
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#2
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Does anyone have some thoughts on this? I sort of really want the N800, but when I think about it objectively the N560 seems to come out on top, primarily due to the much better software support it currently enjoys, and the fact that I feel I could much more readily sit down and start writing software for a Windows Mobile device than for an N800.
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2007-05-04
, 07:29
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Posts: 3,401 |
Thanked: 1,255 times |
Joined on Nov 2005
@ London, UK
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#3
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2007-05-04
, 07:33
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Posts: 2,152 |
Thanked: 1,490 times |
Joined on Jan 2006
@ Czech Republic
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#4
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-- Things I know how to program in include C++, Python, and wxWidgets. Both support the first two, but I don't imagine wxWidgets will show up on the N800 any time soon, whereas it is somewhat usable on Windows Mobile (the N560). How difficult is programming the N800's native GUI API?
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2007-05-04
, 14:21
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Posts: 8 |
Thanked: 0 times |
Joined on Mar 2007
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#5
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2007-05-04
, 15:09
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Posts: 5,795 |
Thanked: 3,151 times |
Joined on Feb 2007
@ Agoura Hills Calif
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#6
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2007-05-04
, 17:03
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Posts: 37 |
Thanked: 2 times |
Joined on May 2007
@ Wimer, Oregon
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#7
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2007-05-04
, 17:10
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Posts: 3,401 |
Thanked: 1,255 times |
Joined on Nov 2005
@ London, UK
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#8
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In general I take it ones compiles N800 code on a Linux box and then dumps the executables onto the N800, right? I.e., no compiling directly on the N800?
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2007-05-04
, 20:39
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Posts: 4 |
Thanked: 0 times |
Joined on Apr 2007
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#9
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2007-05-04
, 20:53
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Posts: 2,152 |
Thanked: 1,490 times |
Joined on Jan 2006
@ Czech Republic
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#10
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-- N800 has 800x480 screen, N560 has 640x480 screen; more resolution is always nice
-- N800 is somewhat larger
-- Both have integrated WiFi and Bluetooth
-- Both have USB host support in hardware, but N800's Kernel doesn't yet support it (whereas using USB keyboard with the N560 is common -- personally I prefer this over a Bluetooth keyboard since it's one less battery to have to keep charged)
-- Speaking of keyboard, with no external keyboard the N800 has an apparently quite usable "thumb keyboard" touchscreen mode. The N560 figures you'll be using a stylus.
-- N560 has a built-in GPS receiver! N800 could pair with a BT GPS receiver -- I have a GPSlim 236, which people report the N800 works with -- but more importantly, there's already a handful of high-quality, commercial mapping/navigation programs for PocketPCs. I use Mapopolis, whereas TomTom is probably the most popular. Nokia just announced some mapping software, but only for Europe... and I'm in the U.S.
-- N800 is perhaps a little more "hackable" being LINUX-based (a shell in Windows Mobile is not a common sight!), although I've read some of the boot code is locked and therefore it's not completely "open."
-- Things I know how to program in include C++, Python, and wxWidgets. Both support the first two, but I don't imagine wxWidgets will show up on the N800 any time soon, whereas it is somewhat usable on Windows Mobile (the N560). How difficult is programming the N800's native GUI API?
-- NNTP newsreaders for Windows Mobile aren't very good (the fullest featured one, Qusnetsoft, is quite buggy), whereas I'd suspect the one that comes on the N800 is quite usable?
-- Both seem to be OK at reading PDF files and running a remote desktop client if need be.
-- N560 has Pocket Excel/Word... N800 has... ???
-- The N800 is ~$380 street price, whereas the N560 is ~$620 in the U.S. Even accounting for the N560's GPS receiver, it's still not quite as good a value. (Although the N560's high-price seems to have to do primarily with Fujitsu not making any effort to distribute it in the U.S., so you only have a few specialized importers which drives up the cost.)
-- N800 has 2 SD slots, N560 has one.
-- N560 has IrDA, N800 doesn't. I've used IrDA in the past to print photos from my phone -- nice little feature, and printers with IrDA still seem a little more common than those with Bluetooth or WiFi.
-- N800 appears to have much better battery life?
-- N800 has a built-in FM radio.
Does anyone have some thoughts on this? I sort of really want the N800, but when I think about it objectively the N560 seems to come out on top, primarily due to the much better software support it currently enjoys, and the fact that I feel I could much more readily sit down and start writing software for a Windows Mobile device than for an N800.
Thanks for your input,
---Joel Kolstad