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2009-10-21
, 19:07
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Posts: 367 |
Thanked: 176 times |
Joined on Oct 2009
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#181
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2009-10-21
, 19:52
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Posts: 607 |
Thanked: 450 times |
Joined on Sep 2009
@ Washington, DC
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#182
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2009-10-21
, 20:00
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Posts: 5,478 |
Thanked: 5,222 times |
Joined on Jan 2006
@ St. Petersburg, FL
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#183
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Nokia sold me an N810 that is supposedly open but can't be upgraded to the supposedly open Maemo 5.
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2009-10-21
, 22:12
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Posts: 607 |
Thanked: 450 times |
Joined on Sep 2009
@ Washington, DC
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#184
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Says who, exactly? TI should be releasing the PowerVR drivers this week and Mer should be integrating them soon after. "Open" doesn't mean Nokia has to provide neverending software upgrades, it just means you're free to scratch your own itches.
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2009-10-22
, 02:18
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Posts: 203 |
Thanked: 68 times |
Joined on Oct 2009
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#185
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So I should support clunky and poorly integrated applications and services just to spite Google? Is that Maemo's new strategy?
If you want to debate the merits of Google's implementation of Linux versus Nokia's implementation of Linux or Motorola's phone versus Nokia's phone or even Google's use of closed source applications versus Nokia's use of closed source applications, fine.
But does every mention of Android have to result in attacks on Google? It's as if I jumped into every N900 thread to complain that Nokia is evil because they refuse to write an OS which will allow me to update my N810 to Maemo 5.
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2009-10-22
, 07:52
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Moderator |
Posts: 7,109 |
Thanked: 8,820 times |
Joined on Oct 2007
@ Vancouver, BC, Canada
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#186
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I also think we're probably living in the hay day of platform options right now. The market will narrow and we'll all look back at this time wistfully.
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2009-10-22
, 12:26
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Posts: 367 |
Thanked: 176 times |
Joined on Oct 2009
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#187
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It's still a dual-LED flash, so did you find a comparative test somewhere? Whether capacitive is better is debatable, or circumstantial. Slimmer, better existing coverage, and subsidized, so better in those aspects. Weight, we don't know yet.
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2009-10-22
, 13:08
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Posts: 1,878 |
Thanked: 646 times |
Joined on Sep 2007
@ San Jose, CA
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#188
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Even if Android's limitations won't be considered, it'll still be an inferior OS, due its Java layer on top of the Linux kernel, which leads to inefficiency.
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2009-10-22
, 13:35
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Posts: 288 |
Thanked: 196 times |
Joined on Oct 2009
@ London
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#189
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Actually, I haven't noticed any speed problems compared to my N800 or N810. Dalvik (not Java) runs quite fast. One of the differences between Dalvik and Java is ... Dalvik removes a ton of things that slow Java down.
Sure, a virtual machine language will always be slower than a native machine language, but that doesn't mean it's going to be noticeably slower (noticeable to the user -- which is all that matters, since we're not doing number crunching or protein folding, nor anything along those lines).
The idea that Dalvik somehow makes Android inferior is just silly. It's actually a strong point for Android, making for one app store no matter which underlying device platform you're running it on, yet with runtime speeds that are more than capable of keeping up with the user.
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2009-10-22
, 14:07
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Posts: 2 |
Thanked: 1 time |
Joined on Oct 2009
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#190
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Dalvik != JavaVM, its a bastardised version of it and is highly optimised. Android also allows for native development thanks to the newly released 1.5 native dev kit NDK.
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Tags |
comparison, competition, droid, fight, milestone, motorola droid, motorola milestone, n900, nokia n900 |
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