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2006-05-02
, 19:51
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Posts: 3,401 |
Thanked: 1,255 times |
Joined on Nov 2005
@ London, UK
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#12
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I guess that depends on the bank and/or the country. My own bank's net access to account management is rather plain HTML and works just fine in the 770's Opera over https...
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2006-05-13
, 10:20
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Posts: 139 |
Thanked: 24 times |
Joined on Sep 2005
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#13
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Internet banking software typically needs Java for its functionality and if internet is a killing application for N770, then Java (JVM) has to be available. The lack of Java is surprising for me, since N770 hardware (OMAP1710) is designed to support Java applications.
Conclusion: With UMPC you can control your account and transfer your money. With N770 you can’t (now?). I hope that developers will solve this problem quickly.
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2006-05-13
, 20:46
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Posts: 772 |
Thanked: 183 times |
Joined on Jul 2005
@ Montclair, NJ (NYC suburbs)
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#14
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especially the RS-MMC that is rare, provides little storage and is expensive
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2006-06-01
, 23:32
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Posts: 207 |
Thanked: 3 times |
Joined on Jun 2006
@ Texas
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#15
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2006-06-01
, 23:37
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Posts: 207 |
Thanked: 3 times |
Joined on Jun 2006
@ Texas
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#16
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At $28 for 1GB, I don't think we should be calling RS-MMC expensive. And maybe you can't find it in Staples, but I wouldn't call it rare. And come on, 1 GB is big, even if some other memory chip formats have bigger cards.
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2006-06-02
, 05:10
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Posts: 190 |
Thanked: 5 times |
Joined on Nov 2005
@ Bee-u-tee-ful Garden Home, Oregon
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#17
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These posts are...bemusing. You really cannot compare anything unless you look at price points.
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2006-06-02
, 08:31
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Posts: 1,513 |
Thanked: 2,248 times |
Joined on Mar 2006
@ US
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#18
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Sorry, I disagree. If I need access to Wells Fargo , what does saving $500 buying a 770 vs a UMPC mean to me? Nothing.
If it doesn't do what I want, it's a waste. It's as easy as that.
Please don't think I'm trashing the 770 - I'm not. But for someone like me, the UMPC makes a lot of sense.
Part of my job involves supporting an application that runs under windows (as well as HP/UX, AIX, Solaris, and RH/AS). For the most part, the 770 allows me to sit in a dive bar and answer e-mail and do my job with a cigarette in one hand and a microbew beer in the other, connected by my bluetooth EDGE phone while I type on a bluetooth keyboard... and that is amazing. And yes, I do have three hands.
But sometimes I need to run a windows application - how will buying the 770 help someone in that situation? Why is the UMPC so bad?
Price is important, but you need to look at need first... no matter how cheap it is, if it doesn't do what you need, it's not money saved.
Notice I said need, not want. That's a whole other issue.
The cynical might even say the UMPC will do more on the day of release than the 770 can do a year later... (but again, what do you really need?)
Just trying to inject a bit of reality.
Brad.
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2006-06-02
, 08:52
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Posts: 51 |
Thanked: 4 times |
Joined on Nov 2005
@ Midlands, UK
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#19
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If it doesn't do what I want, it's a waste. It's as easy as that.
Please don't think I'm trashing the 770 - I'm not. But for someone like me, the UMPC makes a lot of sense.
Part of my job involves supporting an application that runs under windows (as well as HP/UX, AIX, Solaris, and RH/AS). For the most part, the 770 allows me to sit in a dive bar and answer e-mail and do my job with a cigarette in one hand and a microbew beer in the other, connected by my bluetooth EDGE phone while I type on a bluetooth keyboard... and that is amazing. And yes, I do have three hands.
But sometimes I need to run a windows application - how will buying the 770 help someone in that situation? Why is the UMPC so bad?
Price is important, but you need to look at need first... no matter how cheap it is, if it doesn't do what you need, it's not money saved.
Notice I said need, not want. That's a whole other issue.
The cynical might even say the UMPC will do more on the day of release than the 770 can do a year later... (but again, what do you really need?)
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2006-06-08
, 00:53
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Posts: 207 |
Thanked: 3 times |
Joined on Jun 2006
@ Texas
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#20
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I've just been given a UMPC (a Samsung Q-somethingorother) to roadtest for my wife's company. I also have a 770.
The UMPC is "so bad" because it sucks in /so/ many different ways:
...snip...
The virtual keyboard sucks totally, and doesn't appear nicely when it's needed
...snip...
To anyone considering getting a UMPC - try before you buy. PLEASE.
Jaycee
Back in '95 when SONY introduced the first Playstation the games were not very impressive at first. They got better, though, as the game software makers learned what to do with the console. In 2000 when SONY introduced the PS/2 it was the same scenario - the games didn't at first take advantage of the new hardware, really, but the game software makers gradually figured out how to take advantage of it. It always happens like this. The 770 is about 6 months old and the software to exploit it is coming along from many directions at what I think is a respectable rate. The fact that it's free software (i.e., GPL) is fortifying the development of software to exploit the 770, though. It's still early.
Why doesn't Micro$oft easy our pain and provide X for us all, like Apple does, like Linux, BSD & UNIX do? Well, they deliberately won't. And they deliberately made sure that you can't get X on a Windows thin client, either. You can achieve X on a PC with Cygwin or some proprietary implementation of X or you could convince Bill Gates to put X on Windows so that a Windows PC could try to serve up client applications to a world of remote X users. Windows operating systems aren't designed to do this, though, so X on Windows is basically a hack - always has been, always will be.
Do you want your application to support many remote users in a collaborative software network? Don't write your application for any Windows OS, write it for X, and none of those remote users will ever have to install your app, worry about the storage it requires, or worry about whether the serious number crunching will ever affect their 770's because they are remote display users and not PC users.
Last edited by Remote User; 2006-05-02 at 20:23. Reason: Editing