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2008-01-07
, 17:41
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Posts: 566 |
Thanked: 150 times |
Joined on Dec 2007
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#52
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2008-01-07
, 17:44
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Posts: 130 |
Thanked: 13 times |
Joined on Dec 2007
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#53
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2008-01-07
, 17:49
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Posts: 472 |
Thanked: 107 times |
Joined on Apr 2007
@ Texas
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#54
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...many things require community solutions to complement what Nokia provides (e.g., a camera that only works with tablet-to-tablet calls). ...
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2008-01-07
, 17:49
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Posts: 11,700 |
Thanked: 10,045 times |
Joined on Jun 2006
@ North Texas, USA
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#55
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2008-01-07
, 19:33
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Posts: 469 |
Thanked: 88 times |
Joined on Sep 2007
@ Montana
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#56
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Even my Palm in 480x320 portrait mode displays slashdot.org much better than the N800 in _any_ mode. Whatever you do in the N800's landscape mode you can't get that site to show more than a small amount of information at the time.In portrait mode you'll simply adjust it sideways until you have the articles screen filling the whole screen (with or without zoom as you prefer), then page down with the D-pad (if you have that one properly configured). Much much better than what's now possible.
Ah, and I don't understand what you mean by 'the cost of column width'. The whole point is that with portrait mode you adjust the N800 to the site's enforced column width. As a reader I don't care about the _other_ columns - all the information is in the central column.
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2008-01-07
, 20:09
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Posts: 1 |
Thanked: 0 times |
Joined on Jan 2008
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#57
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2008-01-07
, 21:10
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Posts: 356 |
Thanked: 231 times |
Joined on Oct 2007
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#58
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2008-01-07
, 21:47
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Posts: 465 |
Thanked: 149 times |
Joined on Oct 2007
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#59
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The only difference is that you would have more vertical size, but that would come at the cost of column width also. Far from perfect IMO.
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2008-01-07
, 21:52
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Posts: 472 |
Thanked: 107 times |
Joined on Apr 2007
@ Texas
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#60
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- one column menus should go away. scrolling menu is awkward in both modes: stylus and finger
- give option for interface: a) it should always behave as touched with stylus, b) as above but with finger, c) guess. The most infuriating thing about current behaviour (c in proposition) is that I never know which menu/keybord will pop up.
Give FM radio back!
The *biggest* problem I've seen with the platform has been Nokia's strategy to try to provide everything without refining first. That would be the crux of why they themselves say it's not a consumer product yet, because many things are partially-implemented and many things require community solutions to complement what Nokia provides (e.g., a camera that only works with tablet-to-tablet calls). That's very different than if Nokia didn't provide these partially-implemented features at all, BTW, because it perpetuates a feeling of brokenness and incompleteness that wouldn't be there if Nokia had focused on a few, key applications and had slowly rolled in extra functionality later. Every point of incompleteness becomes what Henry Dreyfuss would call a "point of friction" where the experience is bad -- and since people remember bad experiences more than good ones (scientifically proven!), you end up with an unsatisfying product. [In case you don't recognize the argument, this is Apple's approach -- don't implement unless it's complete -- and it's been ridiculously successful in the last decade.]
The prime example: I don't complain about it being a bad PDA because there are no PIM apps. There's a philosophy that if I want those features, I use a web service, I install 3rd party software, or I buy something else. Done. And I'm cool with that.
Every time I find something exciting with it (e.g., reading reviews from Pitchfork and then downloading tracks from eMusic directly to the device) I face extremely basic features missing (e.g., no album art, files sorted out of order, song titles jumbled) that other devices have had solved for years. It makes the tablet the most extreme love/hate relationship I've ever had with a gadget. It's the saying "jack of all trades, master of none" made corporeal.
But seeing the course this device has held since the 770 (which I've also owned; e.g., that damn RSS reader) up until this OS2008 release, I don't have the confidence that Nokia is going to be able to take this where it needs to be anymore. It's still the best for what it is right now, which sadly says more about how others are failing than how Nokia is succeeding, and what it's really doing is making me extremely hungry to jump ship the moment a proper competitor appears.
It's not unsolvable, but 2008 *is* going to be the year of the MID, and they are going to be up in their armpits with direct competitors (e.g., the mylo 2 has touch/Skype/Flash for YouTube/etc.). I would certainly like Nokia & Maemo to survive it.
P.S. I too have the SD unmount problem, and it's something that never happened in OS2007 but did appear after flashing-without-restore.
Last edited by namtastic; 2008-01-07 at 17:36.