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2007-07-28
, 03:26
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Posts: 3,401 |
Thanked: 1,255 times |
Joined on Nov 2005
@ London, UK
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#292
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2007-07-28
, 03:51
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Posts: 2,869 |
Thanked: 1,784 times |
Joined on Feb 2007
@ Po' Bo'. PA
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#293
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2007-07-28
, 04:40
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Posts: 11,700 |
Thanked: 10,045 times |
Joined on Jun 2006
@ North Texas, USA
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#294
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2007-07-28
, 04:42
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Posts: 5,478 |
Thanked: 5,222 times |
Joined on Jan 2006
@ St. Petersburg, FL
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#295
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Arnim has valid points though, but here's what I'd like to see: split the platform into 3 areas of focus.
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2007-07-28
, 08:32
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Posts: 236 |
Thanked: 149 times |
Joined on Jul 2007
@ Finland
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#296
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2007-07-28
, 15:37
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Posts: 5,478 |
Thanked: 5,222 times |
Joined on Jan 2006
@ St. Petersburg, FL
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#297
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Many people seem to emphasize that N800 is a computer, and I think that it's a huge mistake. If you place it in the computer domain, it is a slow computer with tiny screen, little storage, crappy text input and non-existent expandability. In my opinion it's not a computer, nor is it a PDA. It's an open source portable platform with steroids. With proper care and love you can make it do anything you like
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2007-07-28
, 16:45
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Posts: 2,869 |
Thanked: 1,784 times |
Joined on Feb 2007
@ Po' Bo'. PA
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#298
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Ah, but you're missing the point, it is a computer, just a computer with which you can browse the internet, watch movies, listen to music, video chat with friends, talk on IRC, navigate with Google Earth, and SSH into your home machine in comfort and style from your pocket. It's a truely portable laptop the frees you from all the nasty pitfalls of a laptop while sacrificing a minimum of functionality.
While I agree that calling it a computer may undermine its position somewhat, it does avoid the pitfalls of 'PDA' or 'PMP'. I don't believe using the poorly understood 'internet tablet' or 'internet device' nomers is necessarily a good choice either, as people seem to assume that it's a fancy term for 'PDA'.
Really, though, the device is a perfect complement to a desktop computer to eliminate that horrobly unusable class of ''mobile'' computing machines know as laptops.
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2007-07-28
, 22:56
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Posts: 1,107 |
Thanked: 720 times |
Joined on Mar 2007
@ Germany
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#299
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Arnim has valid points though, but here's what I'd like to see: split the platform into 3 areas of focus--
-General multimedia (current N800)
-Gaming (call it the Ngage800)
-Enterprise/business (E800, et al)
There would be significant overlap between the 3, of course, but each would have unique features that made it better for its intended purpose. Naturally, you could still play some basic games on the "E800" and check email on the "Ngage800" but the commonality would essentially end right about there.
Please, no. If I wanted a gaming device, I'd get a DS; a business PDA, I'd get a Palm; a PMP, I'd get an Archos, but I don't want any of those things,
I want an N800--a Linux computer that fits comfortably in your pocket and will do nearly anything a laptop will do at a small fraction of the size....
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2007-07-29
, 00:50
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Posts: 5,478 |
Thanked: 5,222 times |
Joined on Jan 2006
@ St. Petersburg, FL
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#300
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This is precisely the point. With only minor hardware adjustments, the device could gain the capabilities of a laptop. Your second statement (the tablet as a universal computer) directly contradicts the first (suggesting people should carry a Nokia Tablet, a Nintendo, a Palm and an Archos for diverse applications).
-General multimedia (current N800)
-Gaming (call it the Ngage800
-Enterprise/business (E800, et al)
There would be significant overlap between the 3, of course, but each would have unique features that made it better for its intended purpose. Naturally, you could still play some basic games on the "E800" and check email on the "Ngage800" but the commonality would essentially end right about there.
Just my opinion. Don't shoot.