The Following 7 Users Say Thank You to cricker For This Useful Post: | ||
![]() |
2010-01-17
, 17:18
|
Posts: 168 |
Thanked: 29 times |
Joined on Dec 2009
|
#72
|
![]() |
2010-01-17
, 18:25
|
Posts: 79 |
Thanked: 42 times |
Joined on Dec 2009
@ London
|
#73
|
![]() |
2010-01-17
, 19:23
|
Posts: 15 |
Thanked: 6 times |
Joined on Jan 2010
|
#74
|
The Following User Says Thank You to Sudisk For This Useful Post: | ||
![]() |
2010-01-17
, 19:57
|
Posts: 72 |
Thanked: 21 times |
Joined on Dec 2009
|
#75
|
The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to kaz911 For This Useful Post: | ||
![]() |
2010-01-17
, 21:53
|
Posts: 288 |
Thanked: 196 times |
Joined on Oct 2009
@ London
|
#76
|
![]() |
2010-01-17
, 22:06
|
|
Posts: 297 |
Thanked: 54 times |
Joined on Sep 2009
@ new jersey, usa
|
#77
|
Very interesting article.
I dont know about android being a dead end, the latest android devices have generated a lot of hype and are very powerful devices. I think if SE and Motorola embrace Android then then they do not need one of their own and they can keep on making good devices.
Nokia are struggling with Symbian, if you put S60 5th up against Apple, Android, Palm and even Maemo it is the ugly step sister of the bunch. It looks very archaic and ugly, cant speak for europe but here in the states (yes that 7%) I dont know of anyone with a S60 5th edition device (actually dont know of anyone with a nokia device period)!
I had a 5800 but jumped over to Maemo when the N900 came out. To make matters worse for Symbian at the minute Nokia have crippled all of their latest S60 5th offerings with only 128MB's worth of memory which sucks to say the least!!! 128MB's of memory is far too constrained, even worse so when you compare that the nexus one has 512MB's of memory.
Nokia make great hardware devices, while the 5800 had major failings it was cheap and packed a lot of top end hardware! The problem though is the software and services, Ovi is a good start but as of yet the N900 does not have OVI support or an Ovi store. Apple set the standard here and everyone else has been trying to catch up - the current Ovi store Nokia have uses WRT which I found to be a total pain to use!
I think this next year will be very interesting to watch. I am hoping that the N900 does not get sidelined by Nokia, I am very hopeful for this device!
![]() |
2010-01-17
, 22:39
|
Posts: 288 |
Thanked: 196 times |
Joined on Oct 2009
@ London
|
#78
|
i dont agree totally. s60 is awesome and a little complicated if you dnt take 3 days to learn it.
![]() |
2010-01-18
, 00:23
|
|
Posts: 297 |
Thanked: 54 times |
Joined on Sep 2009
@ new jersey, usa
|
#79
|
1. if Nokia could make as much money as apple on Apps - they would. They are a commercial business and need to make stockholders happy - period.
2. Nokia seems to have found a new working trend. Release a Beta Product. Do a few incremental upgrades. Then after 6-12 months do a real update so the device can actually do what it was meant to do and release a "MINI" version at the same time. So I guess if I'm right V2 is about 8-10 months away and N900 mini will be launched. (For those who do not know - that above was the tale of the N97)
Well here is what it meant to my "first mover" friends. Many of them bought the device when it came out (N97) they then got so angry with the bugs - that they ALL (we are talking 12-15 people) - moved to iPhone that covers most of their needs.
Some of them have iPhone 3G - Some got 3GS. But speaking to them now - they have no intention on changing. The average "First Mover" is actually quite happy with their iPhone - and the ones who got the 3G - have not upgraded to 3GS. They still look hungry at new offerings (they are first movers after all) - but they are contempt with the phone they have and won't change UNLESS something comes along that will impress them as first movers.
I DO NOT care about OS wars - Windows, OSX, Linux/distribution, Solaris, DOS, Windows Mobile, Palm, Android etc. But what I do care about is my Phone can do basic stuff like Exchange email, send sms's, use USSD (* commands), use voicemail.
What I LIKE to have is VPN with Default gateway to VPN server on ALL networks, VoIP working in background so it is loaded all of the time - and a phone I can rely on.
I do not care if you call it a computer, I don't care about OS, I care about usability and interoperability and convergence . I don't even care who makes them (apart from child or slave labour)
N900 scores high on convergence - but usability and interoperability - is the weak points. Not that it does not have it. It is just not up to Nokia Pedigree - and the competition beats it hands down in those areas.
If iPhone had a SIP client that would run in the background - it would probably cover my needs. But since it does not - I try to find ones that does. But with Nokia it seems like you have to read BETWEEN the lines to figure out what it CAN'T do (yet) - and not trust the consumer oriented marketing coming out of Nokia about the N900.
Sour grapes - yes - but Nokia needs to stop the N97 tactics before every first mover sits with an iPhone in their hands. (replace iPhone with "Android", "WebOS", "Windows Mobile 7(sic)") or they will have some pretty sad shareholders.
![]() |
2010-01-18
, 00:56
|
Posts: 13 |
Thanked: 7 times |
Joined on Dec 2009
|
#80
|
There are a lot of people on the forums who seem to hate the Nokia N900, and I'm really not sure why. It's not that I'm "a fanboy", it's that I really like the phone.
I owned the iphone and the iphone 3g, still have both, and have no temptation to ever plug them in again.
- Apps? Who needs them? It wasn't until I got the Nokia N900 that I realized that apps were a crutch for underlying operating limitations. When I had an iphone, I ended up with 60-80 apps, all of which were basically working around the low resolution of the device. My computer (desktop PC) only needs 4-5 apps--why does my phone need 10x as many apps as my desktop? The web is the platform.
- Lack of backgrounding on the iphone really sucks. Honestly, the address book is 10x better on the N900 than on the iPhone (although I do wish for customizable ring tones). A single point of access for IM + SMS + Phone + Skype + Voip + whatever is much better than rummaging through 10 different apps. In this case, the iphone apps are a workaround for a closed architecture--plugins do the job much more elegently here.
- Web browser - I remembered how I felt when I first surfed the web on the iPhone--I was amazed at how much better this was than on previous smart phones. Same experience with the N900--it is simply much better than the previous generations of phones.
- GPS - Ok, I find the app unusable. I did have to use the google maps hack here, so I guess there's a point. Still, with the google maps hack, I find it about on par with an iphone 3g.
- USB drive mode - In the end, the reason I gave up on the iphone came down to iTunes. I run Linux and kept a dedicated windows XP computer just for syncing the iphone with iTunes. It still was buggy and painful as hell. In the end, I did everything I could to avoid syncing -- lived with the same 5 gigs of music, used an app to download movies off my windows share, skipped upgrades until it was necessary to keep apps going, anything possible to not go down that hellhole again.
- Great phone / camera
- Multitasking - Yes, I need this, even on my 3.5" phone. Sometimes I need to pull something off a web page and put it in email or pull something off an email and put in an IM. Quite nice.
- Stability - I've had 0 lockups in 2 months. I've had maybe 1-2 app crashes, although even those could have just been slowness on websites with too much flash (my desktop browser crashes more often for that reason).
- No corrupted app database. I don't miss that particular iPhone feature that forced me to uninstall all my apps about every three months because something hosed up the app database. It was so bad that I stopped doing any app that didn't sync to the cloud, because I kept on losing data with no way of recovering. Yeah, the iphone "just works", my ***. It does, until it doesn't. At least it's pretty when it's broken.
- Only Landscape mode? I don't particularly care--I much prefer to not have to scroll left->right on my web browsing. I really don't see what the big deal is here--desktop computing is "landscape mode", so it's what I'm used to. So, the iphone could flip--nice parlor trip. The only reason I used the portrait mode on there is that the onscreen keyboard on the iphone took up the entire screen in landscape mode, so there wasn't a choice.
- Tether - I suppose, to be technical, the iphone has this. However, the iPhone's only US carrier, AT&T, doesn't. Nokia N900 does this, and it works beautifully. I got this working with Linux in about 5 seconds. That's a record for getting anything working with Linux.
- Working Bluetooth
- Games - Ok, I tried doing games on the iPhone. I really did. A few worked well. However, the whole idea of "touchscreen as a joystick" really, really sucks. I can't do it. I tried to like it. I probably sunk about $50 into apps that use this premise, and I never could get into it--it didn't seem to work all that well and, damn it, when I push a key, I want it to push.
- Keyboard - Man, I love me a physical keyboard. The N900's not great, but it's still much better than that on screen crap. I like buttons that go down and then up. You know, like when you push on them. It's nice. It's feedback. It sends pleasure signals to my brain. I could type pretty dang fast on the iphone on screen stuff, but I didn't really type that much because it just wasn't very inviting. Keyboards invite you to type, a screen invites you to watch.
Notice none of this is because of "Linux". Although I run Linux on my desktop, I don't want to hack my phone. I just want it to work. Which, pretty much is my feeling on the Nokia N900.
There are some things with the UI that could be cleaned up, I suppose, although I don't remember what
Nokia, do what you need to do to mature the OS into mass market. Still, you have produced the first smartphone that I've loved in 10 years, so please don't change too much. There's a lot of hate on the forum, and I can't tell whether they really don't like the N900 for legitimate reasons or they just miss having to deal with iTunes. Regardless, don't pay them much heed, please.