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2015-10-21
, 17:19
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Posts: 440 |
Thanked: 2,256 times |
Joined on Jul 2014
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#62
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As mentioned, a mere Solu app will not suffice. It's not just the limitations on AppStore/Play etc, we do actually go down into the kernel level to make this whole model work. Now we could possibly have a virtual desktop environment, but none of those have ever been successful and, I believe, for good reason: the experience is too 'geeky'. You end up having an OS with its oldschool windows which then contain another OS with a completely different model. There is too much mental load and the experience is bad.
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2015-10-21
, 22:32
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Posts: 741 |
Thanked: 900 times |
Joined on Nov 2007
@ Auckland NZ
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#63
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2015-10-25
, 12:09
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Posts: 46 |
Thanked: 116 times |
Joined on Jan 2012
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#64
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2015-10-25
, 12:10
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Posts: 46 |
Thanked: 116 times |
Joined on Jan 2012
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#65
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I get where Solu is coming from. They look at how joe public have embraced Chrome OS and see a gap in the market for people who perhaps don't want to trust Google with all their information, similar to Jolla's pitch. The challenge is how do you prevent Chromebook manufacturers from ripping off your hardware idea and simply releasing a Chromebox that doubles as a magic trackpad? What about those nifty new Windows phones that turn into a desktop computer when plugged into a dock? The challenges are great but I can see how easily it could succeed if implemented correctly and offering enough applications. Finding enough people willing to pay €20 a month to remain plugged into the matrix will be the hardest sell though.
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2015-10-25
, 15:13
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Posts: 440 |
Thanked: 2,256 times |
Joined on Jul 2014
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#66
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The question about the tablet form factor is interesting. The OS and UI has very intentionally been designed to scale to many different sizes and forms. If you pop by our office you might have a chance to see it running on a tablet :-). We chose this form because of its mobility and the ability to use it neatly as a trackpad. Plus we wanted to avoid the 'yet another tablet' syndrome but bring out something really iconic and different.
On a related theme, I don't actually see desktop computing disappearing anywhere. Sure, people use tablets on the sofa, but for work, a keyboard, and an 'indirect manipulation device' (=a mouse or trackpad) is highly desirable for purely ergonomic reasons. I was once at a presentation by a 'visionary' talking about how pure mobile was the future and computers were going to die. Every single person in that room was sitting behind a laptop. There's a reason for that.
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2015-10-26
, 11:25
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Posts: 46 |
Thanked: 116 times |
Joined on Jan 2012
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#67
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And I like the idea of the trackpad computer, but I guess my main point was not so much about the device but the environment in which it is used. Most of my non-pc-gamer friends don't own a monitor to plug a solu into, they use a laptop, on their couch. And so Solu is asking them, not only to change their OS but also their entire habits around computing, which is a big ask.
Consider this; people now watch video on demand services such as netflix as a primary means of entertainment, which is great because its available all the time, but it lacks the synchronicity of scheduled TV in that you aren't watching something at the same time as your friends. With Solu, the details of what you're watching can be shared on the cloud, and so you can organise a weekly viewing of Game of Thrones with your friends and watch it simultaneously together, perhaps with integrated instant messaging so you can comment on whats happening in the show, safe in the knowledge that your friends are up to the same point. Maybe you're watching a movie, and you can 'share' what you're watching and some of your friends can jump in and watch together in real time.
I think its that level of social integration into the OS that is the real benefit for non-technical users.
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2015-10-26
, 19:10
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Posts: 440 |
Thanked: 2,256 times |
Joined on Jul 2014
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#68
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2015-10-27
, 08:20
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Posts: 46 |
Thanked: 116 times |
Joined on Jan 2012
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#69
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The more I think about it, the more I realise there is a lot of cool ideas and flow on effects from what Solu are trying to do. But I almost wonder whether they're trying to do too much in one step.
- It's Spotify/Netflix/Dropbox for Apps
- It's a social/collaborative computing platform
- It's a portable trackpad computer
Is that too much for Joe Public to take in all in one go? All of these ideas have merit, but tying them all together makes it harder to convince people to join in, and it also means the failure of one idea takes down the others.
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2015-10-27
, 09:49
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Posts: 440 |
Thanked: 2,256 times |
Joined on Jul 2014
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#70
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Yes, it is a big chunk, but there is also a logic to it :-) The Spotify model for apps is directly related to collaboration. We wanted an environment where people can share freely and work together, without consideration for installing and managing applications, and payments is a big part of that. If users would, in this kind of environment, have to worry about in-app purchases and credit cards, it would hinder collaboration.
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DebiaN900 - Native Debian on the N900.Deprecated in favour of Maemo Leste.Maemo Leste for N950 and N9 (currently broken).
Devuan for N950 and N9.
Mobile devices with mainline Linux support - Help needed with documentation.
"Those who do not understand Unix are condemned to reinvent it, poorly." - Henry Spencer