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2010-07-31
, 13:27
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Posts: 4,274 |
Thanked: 5,358 times |
Joined on Sep 2007
@ Looking at y'all and sighing
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#262
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[...]Now with this news about Samsung open-sourcing everything for their phones is in direct contrast to Nokia's lack of effort to pull openness for its community.
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2010-07-31
, 13:36
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Posts: 3,319 |
Thanked: 5,610 times |
Joined on Aug 2008
@ Finland
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#263
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They don't have to. Their track record for Apple has pretty much spoken for itself, and Google phones have managed pretty well too.
Now with this news about Samsung open-sourcing everything for their phones is in direct contrast to Nokia's lack of effort to pull openness for its community. Nokia hasn't really had the best tangible track record despite all assurances of openness and support.
They are, as you put it--paid by Nokia, instead of the open source community which built far better tools and architectures from gcc to Sonar to Linux to Apache and the plethora of GNU tools we all love and depend on in most POSIX environments these days. You're hard pressed to see the same quality and assurances of maintenance from Nokia as you see from corporate sponsored, but importantly, community run projects and developments.
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2010-07-31
, 13:50
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Posts: 4,672 |
Thanked: 5,455 times |
Joined on Jul 2008
@ Springfield, MA, USA
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#264
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Citation, please? Last time I checked, the Galaxy's kernel ships with the object files for their drivers in contrast to Nokia which do give you the full source for their N900 kernel stuff. (Not that I'm putting Nokia on a pedestal here: The last time I checked, what Nokia make up for in open sourcing their kernel stuff, they make up for in closing other stuff. E.g. fmtx_si4713 is open, fmtxd is not. After all, MeeGo on the N900 shall need closed components to run.)
Truth be told, I don't place much faith in Samsung and open source, either. I have a Samsung TV (I can ****ing telnet into my TV!) and their source offerings for that are like Nokia's: Just mostly the opened GNU components that they're obligated to provide, not really their stuff.
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2010-07-31
, 14:01
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Posts: 4,672 |
Thanked: 5,455 times |
Joined on Jul 2008
@ Springfield, MA, USA
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#265
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What I tried to say with my limited diplomacy skills is that even if some have lost the half-full glass vision, it would be at least prudent to give them the benefit of the doubt and not discard any and all their efforts, both community and Nokian, past errors and mistakes notwithstanding (call me an optimist or fanboy, but do we really want more being able to say told-you-so, or open, working devices ?).
As for the announcements, I don't fully understand how they could announce future plans about devices that themselves have not been yet announced (/me gone crosseyed). That's why I say let's at least wait for the exact announcement of the N9-or-whatever-its-called and THEN we can communicate that this or that is good or bad.
EDIT:
So.. Stskeeps is a lemon ?I might have been imprecise - if you look at the team member list, you'll see that even though there are plenty of Nokians there (which I actually think is an advantage), there are also plenty of people with other affiliations (i.e. sponsored), and it *is* open to the open source community (except for them pesky drivers and stuff like BME - but that is a different fight).
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2010-07-31
, 14:31
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Posts: 3,319 |
Thanked: 5,610 times |
Joined on Aug 2008
@ Finland
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#266
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There would be no more 'I told you so' if there were no more 'I told you so' opportunities, would there?
Are you seriously suggesting that people should stop having minimum expectations? We should lower our expectations from Nokia to its customers and the community it claims to be trying to foster around its products?
I'm not sure that optimism has been earned yet and I'm damned sure that blaming the community will do Nokia any good,
good without satisfying the community's requests for support (open code, better customer support, parts, communication, etc.). Placing that lemon label on STSKeeps is marginalizing an individual and misses the points I've been making.
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2010-07-31
, 14:35
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Posts: 857 |
Thanked: 362 times |
Joined on Feb 2009
@ London
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#267
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2010-07-31
, 14:45
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Posts: 1,179 |
Thanked: 770 times |
Joined on Nov 2009
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#268
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Wait. I don't understand. What guarantee are we talking about ? Where are the guarantees that, say, a Droid X (or EVO 4G, Galaxy S) will be upgradeable to Android 3.0 ? Has Apple given a statement that the iPhone4 will be upgradeable to iOS 5 ? Please, let's at least wait until the thing gets released. If you Osborne out, marketing was right (that said, I do think the N9 should have an upgrade guarantee at launch exactly because of it's sensitive position).
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2010-07-31
, 15:26
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Posts: 2,427 |
Thanked: 2,986 times |
Joined on Dec 2007
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#269
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2010-07-31
, 16:25
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Posts: 2,050 |
Thanked: 1,425 times |
Joined on Dec 2009
@ Bucharest
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#270
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But they are released on somewhat mature systems so likely to have less bugs. I have been burnt by all the bugs on Maemo 5 which were never fixed. They may be fixed in Maemo 6 but Maemo 6 may have a completely new set of bugs.
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nokiaisrelevant, noreally! |
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It's truly sad to see Nokia fail to recognize what they HAD as a pioneer in this market at the time--and it's even more frustrating as someone who ALMOST had the kind of product they could trust to recommend to associates, friends and business partners. Ultimately, NOBODY wants to buy something from Nokia with such an awkward support and communication structure in addition to the quick and complete orphaning of tablets and phones.
THIS is why, tragically for Nokia, if MeeGo is to succeed at all it will be because of some other company than Nokia as a member of the MeeGo project. Or, if we're all incredibly lucky, they truly DO build a fully open-source friendly architecture line of products (tablets, handsets, portable gaming console, etc) and THEN just concentrate on that hardware while the community does what they do best with a set of open-source drivers in hand. Nobody would even care that it didn't have apps. They'll write them. The open-source community always have.
My 2 cents and plus some.