The Following User Says Thank You to livefreeordie For This Useful Post: | ||
![]() |
2010-01-27
, 21:05
|
|
Posts: 733 |
Thanked: 991 times |
Joined on Dec 2008
|
#122
|
Yes, but this is marketed as a computer, and not a phone. People have different expectations from a computer.
![]() |
2010-01-27
, 21:06
|
Posts: 481 |
Thanked: 190 times |
Joined on Feb 2006
@ Salem, OR
|
#123
|
![]() |
2010-01-27
, 21:06
|
Posts: 262 |
Thanked: 232 times |
Joined on Aug 2009
|
#124
|
Or you can just stop the music. But hey, if you can convince Nokia to add an option I'm down with that, but that's not their style.
![]() |
2010-01-27
, 21:08
|
Posts: 247 |
Thanked: 91 times |
Joined on Jan 2008
@ London/M4 Corridor
|
#125
|
The thing is that very few (any?) phones in my experience have ever played the ringtone out of the speakers when headphones are connected, but that is now - bizarrely - what the N900 does and I'm sure it caters to a few corner cases - your corner case - but the reality is that most people will have the headphones in their ears when the call comes in. You quickly learned that when you were no longer listening on the headphones you disconnected the headphones from the socket...
![]() |
2010-01-27
, 21:09
|
|
Posts: 3,404 |
Thanked: 4,474 times |
Joined on Oct 2005
@ Germany
|
#126
|
Is it really being marketed as a "computer"? I find that unlikely for Apple, this will be some sort of digital assistant/eBook Reader/Life Planner/etc. - anything but a computer.
![]() |
2010-01-27
, 21:10
|
Posts: 3,401 |
Thanked: 1,255 times |
Joined on Nov 2005
@ London, UK
|
#127
|
Leaving aside whose case is the corner case, if the headphones are bluetooth it makes little sense to disconnect them from the phone by turning them off. They take too long to turn back on and pair automatically fo be useful for the call, so they'll be left on. This gives you the equivalent of plugged in headphones.
![]() |
2010-01-27
, 21:10
|
|
Posts: 4,384 |
Thanked: 5,524 times |
Joined on Jul 2007
@ ˙ǝɹǝɥʍou
|
#128
|
Would you care to define what `real content` means? N900 has undeniably the best browsing experience of all portable gadgets out there, and its browser can access more web pages and web services than all the Apple portable products combined, and the internet is full of all kinds of content.
So, what content N900 cannot access that iPhone/iPod can? I can think of hundreds of examples where the equation is opposite.
![]() |
2010-01-27
, 21:12
|
|
Posts: 136 |
Thanked: 72 times |
Joined on Jan 2010
|
#129
|
![]() |
2010-01-27
, 21:14
|
Posts: 220 |
Thanked: 129 times |
Joined on Nov 2009
|
#130
|
I predict we have a one year window before all relevant services are streaming "living room"-desirable information in a proprietary format rather than what happened with RSS and feeds.