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2011-02-22
, 06:49
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Posts: 248 |
Thanked: 191 times |
Joined on May 2010
@ New Zealand
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#1652
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Your misunderstanding lies in your assumption that TMO is here only for you, your own interests, your own needs... Imagine, TMO also hosts various developers who might be interested in, or even working on the MeeGo project, developers who, together with users and tinkerers, make the TMO be such a nice community and provide other users with goodies that keep making their devices even more awesome than they really are, dispite the total lack of interest from the manufacturer and sole beneficiary of the said devices. And then you go telling them that they are, basicaly, incompetent and that there has been no result of their efforts, even tho you seem not to know the first thing about MeeGo to be able to judge on whether the work done on it has merits or not.
And you don't stop there, you go as far as collectively calling each and every developer unprofessional if they refuse to work in, or switch to environments they don't find worth the interest, or they don't find them to be 'the right tool for the job', or... By your standards a professional developer can be equated to a prostitute, and even most prostitutes will refuse their service if they find the client repulsive. What gives you the right to judge a whole group of people you know nothing about? Developers are not trained monkeys, they are human - they have their preferences, they have their opinions, they might even, god forbid, hold some ideals... Just because you can't seem to understand that doesn't make them any less professional.
And lets not forget various users, non-developers here who might be interested in having the MeeGo project succeed and thus either give a life extension to their aging, abandoned by the manufacturer devices, or produce them a device in the future that fullfills their needs. If I put my user hat on, I have every interest in seeing MeeGo succeed and no interest at all in having a WP7-like world. If I wanted a WP7-like system, I wouldn't be typing this on my N900, I would've got the iPhone long time ago. As a user, not a developer!
And yet again you go about your egocentric point of view. The world does not revolve around you and whether you can understand and/or use something doesn't say anything about that 'something'. In the past several pages of this thread you've been doing nothing but bashing MeeGo without having a clue what MeeGo is - instead you're presenting your own misconceptions about it as a fact. You've been expressing the concern of an end-user, yet you not only fail to understand that different users need different things, you go as far as to claim that you know what a professional developer is and downright discard other people's work based on what you consider valuable.
I'm sorry, but each and every argument you're presenting here is flawed and self-centered, and repeating them in different wording borderlines with tautology.
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2011-02-22
, 06:56
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Posts: 2,829 |
Thanked: 1,459 times |
Joined on Dec 2009
@ Finland
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#1653
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.... but, if I follow a procedure and it doesn't work, and there is no obvious way of resolving that without a lot of messing about... I can't be bothered really..
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2011-02-22
, 10:52
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Posts: 2,121 |
Thanked: 1,540 times |
Joined on Mar 2008
@ Oxford, UK
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#1654
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2011-02-22
, 10:57
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Posts: 248 |
Thanked: 191 times |
Joined on May 2010
@ New Zealand
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#1655
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2011-02-22
, 17:09
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Posts: 69 |
Thanked: 41 times |
Joined on Feb 2010
@ Sweden
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#1656
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I was pointing out the quote refers to developers, not users. The quote was that those developers who like MS do so because of productivity. That is a pretty significant finding. Sure, people may be enthusiastic about linux, but some people are interested in other things.
I like linux, but I do find that it can involve a lot of frigging about - which is unproductive. I also find it frustrated that in some areas, documentation is poor. I tried to install the Maemo SDK on ubuntu. I followed the manual install to the letter - and yet the install process threw up loads of errors. So, in order to use this, I would need to go through the logs and work out what the errors were and what was throwing them up, then figure out what was wrong and needs fixing. Some people might enjoy that - I find it unproductive. When I set up my Debian again, I will have another go at setting it up - and QT as well - but, if I follow a procedure and it doesn't work, and there is no obvious way of resolving that without a lot of messing about... I can't be bothered really.
It is like MeeGo on the netbook or n900 - I'll look at it, and if I can try it without breaking anything I will do that. But if it doesn't work, or it looks like it will break something that works... I can't be bothered.
I have things that do work. I have installed several environments that don't involve a lot of messing about to get them to work - you follow the instructions and they work. If the documentation doesn't yield a working environment, it doesn't give me confidence about working with that system.
Now, somebody can say I don't understand - but if people cannot communicate the benefit of something, provide something that functions, or works after following the documentation - they are the ones with a problem, not me. Telling me I am ignorant doesn't really make it any better.
Mish.
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2011-02-22
, 17:28
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Posts: 69 |
Thanked: 41 times |
Joined on Feb 2010
@ Sweden
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#1657
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.... but, if I follow a procedure and it doesn't work, and there is no obvious way of resolving that without a lot of messing about... I can't be bothered really..
I whole heartily agree with you. Things should work out of box. If they do not then everything depends on how much you have free time and how much you care&need it.
The Following User Says Thank You to Funklord For This Useful Post: | ||
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2011-02-22
, 17:55
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Posts: 248 |
Thanked: 191 times |
Joined on May 2010
@ New Zealand
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#1658
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If you enter a discussion about the pros or cons of something, and haven't thoroughly looked at all the options, marketed or not, you will be seen as ignorant.
And it's pretty clear to me that you don't know very much about Maemo, Meego nor the aims and goals behind Linux.
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2011-02-22
, 18:10
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Posts: 1,179 |
Thanked: 770 times |
Joined on Nov 2009
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#1659
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2011-02-22
, 18:21
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Posts: 513 |
Thanked: 651 times |
Joined on Feb 2011
@ Sweden
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#1660
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Tags |
bye-nokia, i don't even, just shoot him, just shoot me, let's elope, lockdown, meego?fail, negatron dan, nokia defiled, nokia suicide, sell tulips, step 8 out of 5, the-end?, www.elop.org |
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I like linux, but I do find that it can involve a lot of frigging about - which is unproductive. I also find it frustrated that in some areas, documentation is poor. I tried to install the Maemo SDK on ubuntu. I followed the manual install to the letter - and yet the install process threw up loads of errors. So, in order to use this, I would need to go through the logs and work out what the errors were and what was throwing them up, then figure out what was wrong and needs fixing. Some people might enjoy that - I find it unproductive. When I set up my Debian again, I will have another go at setting it up - and QT as well - but, if I follow a procedure and it doesn't work, and there is no obvious way of resolving that without a lot of messing about... I can't be bothered really.
It is like MeeGo on the netbook or n900 - I'll look at it, and if I can try it without breaking anything I will do that. But if it doesn't work, or it looks like it will break something that works... I can't be bothered.
I have things that do work. I have installed several environments that don't involve a lot of messing about to get them to work - you follow the instructions and they work. If the documentation doesn't yield a working environment, it doesn't give me confidence about working with that system.
Now, somebody can say I don't understand - but if people cannot communicate the benefit of something, provide something that functions, or works after following the documentation - they are the ones with a problem, not me. Telling me I am ignorant doesn't really make it any better.
Mish.