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2009-12-13
, 01:58
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Posts: 4,556 |
Thanked: 1,624 times |
Joined on Dec 2007
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#12
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And that is the point - all over the forums are warnings for users not to go into the extras-testing or extras-dev which leads to less people testing.
Im happy to test, but not at the risk of bricking my device (I know its unlikely) but my personal fear is either corrupting the file system or filling the root file partition.
Id like to vote for a decent map solution - Ovi maps is too terrible to mention, I cant wait for maemo mapper
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2009-12-13
, 02:17
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Posts: 1,255 |
Thanked: 393 times |
Joined on Oct 2009
@ US
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#13
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I've been pondering how would you entice developers to the platform. Developers that already have a product that could either port or code for the Maemo platform.
I have a few niche apps, some mainstream, that would make me jump wholeheartedly to the Maemo platform. With the better camera, I'd love a tilt-shift app, have one on the iPhone. Or perhaps a few more location aware apps...
With that said, I'd love to see more apps. How would you get the people to the platform?
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2009-12-13
, 03:13
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Posts: 963 |
Thanked: 626 times |
Joined on Sep 2009
@ Connecticut, USA
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#14
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2009-12-13
, 03:14
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Posts: 486 |
Thanked: 154 times |
Joined on Sep 2009
@ New York City
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#15
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Android and iPhone's dev community was fueled by Google and Apple providing "easy" SDK access and resources (for the most part) and heavily involved with organizing the dev communities. Their marketing was also involved to provide a clear vision and presentation of the OS to the initial dev community. Money was also provided as incentive for some initial apps and then the potential of making money from the market, created the self-perpetuating action fueled by consumer demand. Hence my point about a micro-economy.
If this same level of dev foundation building is being fostered by Nokia for Maemo 5, it is transparent to me. Nokia seems to be spread out with too many OS frameworks- (Maemo 5,6 and S60).
Seems to me Nokia is leveraging too much on the current community and not making much of an effort themselves (IMO).
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2009-12-13
, 09:09
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Posts: 2,173 |
Thanked: 2,678 times |
Joined on Oct 2009
@ Cornwall, UK
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#16
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2009-12-13
, 10:02
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Posts: 138 |
Thanked: 43 times |
Joined on Dec 2009
@ Vancouver Island, Canada
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#17
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Android and iPhone's dev community was fueled by Google and Apple providing "easy" SDK access and resources (for the most part) and heavily involved with organizing the dev communities. Their marketing was also involved to provide a clear vision and presentation of the OS to the initial dev community.
...
Seems to me Nokia is leveraging too much on the current community and not making much of an effort themselves (IMO).
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2009-12-13
, 11:00
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Posts: 113 |
Thanked: 30 times |
Joined on Oct 2009
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#18
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If this same level of dev foundation building is being fostered by Nokia for Maemo 5, it is transparent to me. Nokia seems to be spread out with too many OS frameworks- (Maemo 5,6 and S60).
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2009-12-13
, 11:44
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Posts: 376 |
Thanked: 78 times |
Joined on Sep 2009
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#19
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2009-12-13
, 15:20
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Posts: 3,319 |
Thanked: 5,610 times |
Joined on Aug 2008
@ Finland
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#20
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Blogging about mobile linux - The Penguin Moves!
Maintainer of PyQt (see introduction and docs), AppWatch, QuickBrownFox, etc