|
2011-09-11
, 19:19
|
Posts: 172 |
Thanked: 98 times |
Joined on Aug 2010
@ Forest of Dean, England.
|
#132
|
Ok everybody, cut the crap. Lets not have personal attacks.
thebtman, you're the OP and you've gotta be willing to listen to others points without mocking them. Thats the only way we can move forward. Lets not get petty. You asked why I was taking "such effort to involve yourself with this thread". The reason is that while I don't think the plan being discussed (paying new devs to port maemo) is feasible, doesnt mean I want to see Maemo/n900 die anytime soon. And I want to help find a solution.
And you asked me to provide details about manhours involved in porting. I am not a developer and thus the following maybe completely wrong, but it may give some idea:
Time taken for porting android to maemo: 2+ years and still essential functions are not ready...
Time taken for porting Meego to N900 (no closed bits involved here IMO): 1.5 years+ it's getting there....
|
2011-09-11
, 19:24
|
Posts: 235 |
Thanked: 163 times |
Joined on Dec 2008
@ Costa Rica
|
#133
|
|
2011-09-11
, 19:35
|
Posts: 183 |
Thanked: 113 times |
Joined on Jun 2010
|
#134
|
|
2011-09-11
, 19:51
|
Banned |
Posts: 695 |
Thanked: 308 times |
Joined on Apr 2011
@ originally pakistan ,now in china
|
#135
|
|
2011-09-11
, 20:19
|
|
Posts: 74 |
Thanked: 42 times |
Joined on Apr 2011
@ Oslo - around
|
#136
|
|
2011-09-11
, 20:48
|
Posts: 172 |
Thanked: 98 times |
Joined on Aug 2010
@ Forest of Dean, England.
|
#137
|
There are a couple of important things that have passed Nokia's attention and is the reason to not only donate, but maybe place a huge bet.Until a certain Canadian arrived in Finland, there was a understanding that a mobile phone was used by individuals to communicate, and the value added services were provided by the operators. Nokia made a profit making the handsets, and the operator made a profit by supplying service. That Orange, Vodafone, O2 and T-Mobile slept and forgot to make new services is another discussion.
- 1. Meamo works, it is stable and robust and according to our judgement pretty complete.
- 2. There is a device known as iPhone and another OS known as Android.
Now the Canadian arrived at Nokia and represent an American way of product development that in essence is "do something that is different, give it a name, and spend the millions on marketing - telling the end-consumer that it is The Best Around". That it really is lesser is irrelevant, just like praying in the right direction. Most likely has the Canadian, reverse pole, ordered a halt to all development, making things better. Well Symbian has been outsourced to Accenture.
MeeGo is just another name that allows them to sell N9 the at the best should make all N900 users leave the N900 to buy the N9. If Maemo is a Nokia name, we should make FreeGo - that can run on both.
I am also a firm believer that the Maemo code needs support, and I would prefer that instead of fighting, we should elect Ubuntu Debian Linux as the base, ARM binary and then make the device drivers, and enhance the user interface (x/Window manager) to support touchscreen swipes and gestures. Ubuntu comes with a tablet version now.
Then maybe a new hardware can emerge from another vendor.
I suggest we target Samsung Galaxy II as alternative platform.
The $10 is symbolic, to remove the ties with Nokia as long as the reverse pole reigns.
Most of the code is open source, so the idea of reverse engineering is inappropriate. Nokie has not made proprietary hardware for many years, hence the rederence to the SGII. The hardware is provided by TI.
First project would be to make a proper Android emulator. Then an iPhone emulator. There is a browser on the N900 that supports some iPhone "iAps" - I can read newspapers that "believe" my N900 is an iPhone.
Leave it to Trolltech to port Qt - they use Kubuntu - Debian Linux with KDE. Make the Meamo stable and reliable and they will move with us.
|
2011-09-11
, 21:00
|
Posts: 183 |
Thanked: 113 times |
Joined on Jun 2010
|
#138
|
There are a couple of important things that have passed Nokia's attention and is the reason to not only donate, but maybe place a huge bet.Until a certain Canadian arrived in Finland, there was a understanding that a mobile phone was used by individuals to communicate, and the value added services were provided by the operators. Nokia made a profit making the handsets, and the operator made a profit by supplying service. That Orange, Vodafone, O2 and T-Mobile slept and forgot to make new services is another discussion.
- 1. Meamo works, it is stable and robust and according to our judgement pretty complete.
- 2. There is a device known as iPhone and another OS known as Android.
Now the Canadian arrived at Nokia and represent an American way of product development that in essence is "do something that is different, give it a name, and spend the millions on marketing - telling the end-consumer that it is The Best Around". That it really is lesser is irrelevant, just like praying in the right direction. Most likely has the Canadian, reverse pole, ordered a halt to all development, making things better. Well Symbian has been outsourced to Accenture.
MeeGo is just another name that allows them to sell N9 the at the best should make all N900 users leave the N900 to buy the N9. If Maemo is a Nokia name, we should make FreeGo - that can run on both.
I am also a firm believer that the Maemo code needs support, and I would prefer that instead of fighting, we should elect Ubuntu Debian Linux as the base, ARM binary and then make the device drivers, and enhance the user interface (x/Window manager) to support touchscreen swipes and gestures. Ubuntu comes with a tablet version now.
Then maybe a new hardware can emerge from another vendor.
I suggest we target Samsung Galaxy II as alternative platform.
The $10 is symbolic, to remove the ties with Nokia as long as the reverse pole reigns.
Most of the code is open source, so the idea of reverse engineering is inappropriate. Nokie has not made proprietary hardware for many years, hence the rederence to the SGII. The hardware is provided by TI.
First project would be to make a proper Android emulator. Then an iPhone emulator. There is a browser on the N900 that supports some iPhone "iAps" - I can read newspapers that "believe" my N900 is an iPhone.
Leave it to Trolltech to port Qt - they use Kubuntu - Debian Linux with KDE. Make the Meamo stable and reliable and they will move with us.
|
2011-09-11
, 21:41
|
Posts: 673 |
Thanked: 856 times |
Joined on Mar 2006
|
#139
|
There are a couple of important things that have passed Nokia's attention and is the reason to not only donate, but maybe place a huge bet.Until a certain Canadian arrived in Finland, there was a understanding that a mobile phone was used by individuals to communicate, and the value added services were provided by the operators. Nokia made a profit making the handsets, and the operator made a profit by supplying service. That Orange, Vodafone, O2 and T-Mobile slept and forgot to make new services is another discussion.
- 1. Meamo works, it is stable and robust and according to our judgement pretty complete.
- 2. There is a device known as iPhone and another OS known as Android.
Now the Canadian arrived at Nokia and represent an American way of product development that in essence is "do something that is different, give it a name, and spend the millions on marketing - telling the end-consumer that it is The Best Around". That it really is lesser is irrelevant, just like praying in the right direction. Most likely has the Canadian, reverse pole, ordered a halt to all development, making things better. Well Symbian has been outsourced to Accenture.
MeeGo is just another name that allows them to sell N9 the at the best should make all N900 users leave the N900 to buy the N9. If Maemo is a Nokia name, we should make FreeGo - that can run on both.
I am also a firm believer that the Maemo code needs support, and I would prefer that instead of fighting, we should elect Ubuntu Debian Linux as the base, ARM binary and then make the device drivers, and enhance the user interface (x/Window manager) to support touchscreen swipes and gestures. Ubuntu comes with a tablet version now.
Then maybe a new hardware can emerge from another vendor.
I suggest we target Samsung Galaxy II as alternative platform.
The $10 is symbolic, to remove the ties with Nokia as long as the reverse pole reigns.
Most of the code is open source, so the idea of reverse engineering is inappropriate. Nokia has not made proprietary hardware for many years, hence the rederence to the SGII. The hardware is provided by TI.
First project would be to make a proper Android emulator. Then an iPhone emulator. There is a browser on the N900 that supports some iPhone "iAps" - I can read newspapers that "believe" my N900 is an iPhone.
Leave it to Trolltech to port Qt - they use Kubuntu - Debian Linux with KDE. Make the Meamo stable and reliable and they will move with us.
The Following User Says Thank You to momcilo For This Useful Post: | ||
|
2011-09-11
, 22:23
|
|
Posts: 939 |
Thanked: 366 times |
Joined on Dec 2010
@ U.K.
|
#140
|
Tags |
open-core trap, telethon time |
|
this is the beauty of open source - to boldly go where no company has gone before