The Following 18 Users Say Thank You to christexaport For This Useful Post: | ||
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2010-03-15
, 16:46
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Posts: 446 |
Thanked: 79 times |
Joined on Mar 2010
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#52
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The Following 4 Users Say Thank You to andraeseus1 For This Useful Post: | ||
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2010-03-15
, 16:46
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Posts: 1,589 |
Thanked: 720 times |
Joined on Aug 2009
@ Arlington (DFW), Texas
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#53
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I think even that is wishful thinking... Maemo 5 was basically obsolete already when it was released. It is what it is.
The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to christexaport For This Useful Post: | ||
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2010-03-15
, 17:01
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Posts: 23 |
Thanked: 5 times |
Joined on Mar 2010
@ Esbjerg - Denmark
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#54
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2010-03-15
, 17:20
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Posts: 1,589 |
Thanked: 720 times |
Joined on Aug 2009
@ Arlington (DFW), Texas
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#55
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The problem is not that the phone is not good. Many people realized the phone was primitive at its release but they expected Nokia to provide rapid fixes and updates to the phone.
It has been over 5 months since the phone was released and yet there is no USSD functionality... No GPS navigation ( mere 1990s maps), yet, Nokia is thinking about releasing their maemo/meego device 2Q (next month) simply to keep up with other smart phone devices. Instead of focusing on producing quality product, they produce mediocre product hoping users work on it. I hope they don't abandon their next phone as they did N97 and the N900.
The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to christexaport For This Useful Post: | ||
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2010-03-15
, 17:45
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Posts: 9 |
Thanked: 2 times |
Joined on Feb 2010
@ United Kingdom
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#56
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You can use openoffice through easy-debian, or you can use google docs through the browser
Does the iPhone have video chatting?
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2010-03-15
, 17:56
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Posts: 28 |
Thanked: 8 times |
Joined on Feb 2010
@ berkshire, england
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#57
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The Following 5 Users Say Thank You to jimmyb5374 For This Useful Post: | ||
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2010-03-15
, 18:06
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Posts: 9 |
Thanked: 2 times |
Joined on Feb 2010
@ United Kingdom
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#58
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You thing the browser is what makes the N900 not a smartphone? Its nothing many Android and WebOS devices won't soon be replicating. Its really about the class of OS the N900 is running. It has the same app frameworks and components of a desktop Linux distro, meaning less limitations. Robustness is the applicable word here.
Now I'm shocked you missed the multiple Twitter options. From editing the Twitter webpage using a Greasemonkey script, web apps like Hahlo, native apps like Witter or Mauku, or the Conversations plugin, there are multiple options!
Video chatting is possible using aMSN or if you recieve a Gtalk video conference, and it works very well. Was it not to your liking?
You have to be more realistic, and know that the promise of nirvana with Maemo/MeeGo is tied to Symbian^4, which is still months away. Once S^4 and MeeGo are launched and the ecosystem broadened, apps will pour in.
The Following User Says Thank You to TheLoz For This Useful Post: | ||
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2010-03-15
, 18:31
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Posts: 344 |
Thanked: 73 times |
Joined on Jan 2010
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#59
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I used to say my average phone lifespan is 6 months and we're getting pretty close to that now. Ironically, Apple might be what keeps me an N900 user for a while longer: I'll get the iPad and play with that and feel satisfied with my N900 for a few months more. But if there's no improvement after 7 months on the market, you can be sure I won't stick around much longer. Problem is, I don't really know what to get instead...
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2010-03-15
, 20:37
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Posts: 501 |
Thanked: 292 times |
Joined on Nov 2009
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#60
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Tags |
bye-bye losers, disappointment, hello freedom, n900 != phone, relax |
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Now isn't this laptop more of a computer than an iPhone or Nexus One? I'd say so. Adding Gizmo5 or TruPhone with a wireless data connection to that laptop gives it phone capabilities, but makes it no more a smartphone than a toaster oven. So there's obviously something that separates the two aside from features and form factor.
Now compare that laptop to the N900. How do they differ? The OSes are nearly identical, save he UIs. 90-95% of the app frameworks and infrastructure components are the same. Both have GTK+, Qt, Python, C++, Ruby, Flash, Pulse Audio, Gstreamer, APT, XTerminal, etc. Only their UI layers differentiate the two for the most part.
So this isn't a matter of making a go-kart and calling it a Porsche. Its a smaller package, but the engine and internals are the same, allowing the same power and freedom of its desktop counterpart. It'd be akin to the iPhone running a full finger controlled version of Mac OSX, the Touch Pro2 running Windows 7 with a custom Sense UI layer for touch control, or having a MacBook Pro or Lenovo laptop in you pocket. The developer is limited by nothing but the hardware and level of skill. With a smartphone, there are compromises. With the N900, there are none. You can always add and optimize the features of the N900 to match the iPhone, but to get the iPhone to the N900's level, you'd need years of maturing the OS, and add lots of infrastructure.
Maemo-Freak.com
"...and the Freaks shall inherit the Earth."