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Texrat's Avatar
Posts: 11,700 | Thanked: 10,045 times | Joined on Jun 2006 @ North Texas, USA
#161
Originally Posted by daperl View Post
Seeing and using Microsoft products are two different things. I still have a Hotmail account. Have you used Hotmail lately? It's not usable.
If Ovi mail gets good enough, I'm bailing from Hotmail.

Heck, right now all Ovi really needs to do is integrate its own contacts. They'll need to do that for the netbook... (see what I just did there? )
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benny1967's Avatar
Posts: 3,790 | Thanked: 5,718 times | Joined on Mar 2006 @ Vienna, Austria
#162
Windows, OSX, GNU/Linux, Windows, GNU/Linux, ... why do we care?

I'll tell you why I care and why I'm disappointed:

Part of my respect for Nokia (in the Maemo context) comes from the fact that they believe in GNU/Linux as a commercial alternative. They believe in it as a mass market product. Wow! That's cool. Or so I thought.

A netbook would have been the logical next device to try GNU/Linux on. After all, whatever return statistics say, we have seen the OS work in this market. It almost created it, even if it falls behind now.

Not using either Maemo or Moblin as the default distribution now is like saying: "You thought we trusted in GNU/Linux? Oh, big misunderstanding. It's Symbian and Windows."

Or that's how it seems.

What else could it mean? It could mean that with the current setup (Maemo and Moblin being both in development, consumers needing software they can most easily provide under Windows,...), Nokia goes the other way round:
With the 770, they created a new kind of hardware to attract developers to a new kind of operating system. The netbook could be aimed at consumers from day one, but might include everything hackers need to get whatever version of Debian/Ubuntu/Maemo/Moblin/... up and running. A future Nokia netbook distribution could be co-developed by the community much the same way Maemo was influenced by this community over the years, the difference being that the hardware is not exotic, but mainstream from the start. - So they may wait until ready. Like they did with Maemo.

Well, one can always dream...
 
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#163
Originally Posted by Texrat View Post
When has it been 100% about need?

I want Solidworks on a netbook. Sonar too.
On a 10" screen?

Linux has "90%" on the server market and is secure by default.
 
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Posts: 11,700 | Thanked: 10,045 times | Joined on Jun 2006 @ North Texas, USA
#164
Originally Posted by ColdFusion View Post
On a 10" screen?

Linux has "90%" on the server market and is secure by default.
Sure on a 10" screen. Design on the go.

And why include the "secure by default" comment in a reply to me? I agreed with it.
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Posts: 397 | Thanked: 227 times | Joined on May 2007
#165
I know, it wasn't aimed at you.
 
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#166
Originally Posted by jeremiah View Post
Well, there really is only one OS that scales, and that is linux. It runs the fastest computers (IBM's blue gene et. al) and it runs the smallest computers. Debian runs on at least eight supported architectures, OS X and Windows 7 / Vista only run on Intel architectures. So linux scales broadly and vertically.
But it doesn't run Adobe Photoshop CS4, Illustrator CS4, Flex 3/4. Hell, it doesn't even run Final Cut Studio, After Effects, Office 2007, or Acrobat Pro.

This whole uproar over "It's not Linux"... get over it. OS X ran on Intel and PowerPC... recently discontinued. Windows has run on DEC Alpha, PowerPC, ARM (via a port by the WinNT team), x86 (Via, Cyrix, AMD, Intel, Transmeta).

This whole part about Linux scaling, not all apps are re-compiled, nor can they. And not all apps for other business sectors are present in Linux. As a person that's equal parts designer as well as programmer, Linux is just plain lacking in too many areas where OS X and Windows just does well.

Hell, Mesa3D isn't the same as OpenGL either.

So with that said... this whole concept of "scaling" doesn't equate to a proper business decision for a netbook - a server, yes. More people use this kind of machine for office related functions - especially this niche market - than the usual driver lacking Linux implementation on these kinds of products. Tired of finding out after I install that the drivers for my wifi in a machine doesn't fully support the features as it would in OS X or Windows.

Anyway, this is a mass market device. Don't like the announcement, then the product just isn't for you. And as it stands, what most people want from a device in this thread, it wouldn't be a mass market device anyway.

Last edited by gerbick; 2009-08-24 at 19:54.
 
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#167
Originally Posted by benny1967 View Post
A netbook would have been the logical next device to try GNU/Linux on. After all, whatever return statistics say, we have seen the OS work in this market. It almost created it, even if it falls behind now.
The Atom created the netbook market, not Linux. Linux was in because it was customizable enough to fit into netbook hardware. The same reason why Maemo devices exists, Linux can be made to work on any kind of device, something you can't do with Windows (XP barely fitted in the original netbooks).

You can't really say that the OS that is falling behind is the one that Nokia should bet on their fist release! It makes sense to jump on the winner wagon to create some traction.
 
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#168
Originally Posted by ColdFusion View Post
Linux has "90%" on the server market and is secure by default
Also, most defaced too. Blame Apache.
 
Posts: 397 | Thanked: 227 times | Joined on May 2007
#169
Originally Posted by gerbick View Post
But it doesn't run Adobe Photoshop CS4, Illustrator CS4, Flex 3/4. Hell, it doesn't even run Final Cut Studio, After Effects, Office 2007, or Acrobat Pro.
You don't use that on a 10" netbook.
 
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Posts: 2,427 | Thanked: 2,986 times | Joined on Dec 2007
#170
Let's bounce around some different product names and logos. For product name I came up with:

WTF

But the logo could be something more simple like:

?

Jim Carrey could be the spokesperson.

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