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2011-02-25
, 15:08
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Banned |
Posts: 974 |
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Joined on Oct 2010
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#92
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2011-02-25
, 15:13
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#93
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Wrong. A mobile phone will never be able to fully take over for PCs. The success of the iPhone shows this, by focusing on what that form factor is good at.
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2011-02-25
, 15:23
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Banned |
Posts: 974 |
Thanked: 622 times |
Joined on Oct 2010
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#95
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Maemo was built upon tablets initially. Sure, you could argue that the 770, N800 and N810 were basically telephones without GSM radios, however let's be honest... they were tablets.
Symbian doesn't seem like it could scale up to a tablet; however Maemo could scale "down" to a telephone. However, I think the argument about scalability and how it relates to Linux is too full of foolishness for me to even begin - Linux has spanned from embedded objects, to watches to machines that could win at Jeopardy and all points in-between.
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2011-02-25
, 15:46
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Posts: 1,746 |
Thanked: 2,100 times |
Joined on Sep 2009
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#97
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For you, yes. For the largest manufacturer of mobile phones in the world, no.
You are just a bunch of Linux zealots. Linux is nothing but a simplistic/brute force bloated piece of software, with the only real advantage of being simplistic. Works well on high spec HW (but so does Windows XP).
Anyway, tell me what kind of problems Windows Embedded Compact has with scaling up, other than including proper drivers for new HW. Then explain why this is any different for Linux.
Linux is comparable to Windows 7 (NT) in terms of RT, that is completely off the charts regarding RT but good at running tons of processes where exact timing is no issue, like on a PC.
For mobile phones, running tons of processes has limited advantage, but RT capabilities becomes increasingly important when the HW spec gets lower and simpler.
Nokia is in the need for something that also work well in the sub 200$ range to replace Symbian, and that doesn't suck the life out of the batteries in a couple of hours.
Clearly any scaling of that OS is to be done with a somewhat focus on phones.
WP is a modern engine, fast, compact, reliable. Linux is the old smelly, noisy and inefficient steam engine.
The only success Linux has had is on Android.
The only reason for that success is Googles hard line on cutting off all the bloat.
In the embedded world as well as the PC, Linux will work, but is seldom used for anything real.
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2011-02-25
, 16:17
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Banned |
Posts: 3,412 |
Thanked: 1,043 times |
Joined on Feb 2010
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#98
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2011-02-25
, 16:21
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Posts: 1,746 |
Thanked: 2,100 times |
Joined on Sep 2009
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#99
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Here we go again wmarone you never fail do you to have a go at someone....
Linux for your information has NEVER been the sole and only language before Maemo...
just because "just buried beneath many layers of other code and even harder to access than on Android. Motorola" does not make them Linux mobiles... only the N900 was 100% Linux so ericsson has a valid point ! but you just do not see it duh.
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2011-02-25
, 16:23
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#100
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Again, wrong. Symbian actually scaled "down" from palm sized PC's to phones via Nokia Communicators. What went wrong with Symbian was that it got too messy, and no one alive (literally) being able to do a full clean-up, to modernize it.
But let's be real honest. The only success Linux has had is on Android. The only reason for that success is Googles hard line on cutting off all the bloat. In the embedded world as well as the PC, Linux will work, but is seldom used for anything real. The reason being it is a simplistic bloatware.
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Tags |
bada rox, give me bada, meego rules, sir abill sir !, windowsce blows |
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Symbian doesn't seem like it could scale up to a tablet; however Maemo could scale "down" to a telephone. However, I think the argument about scalability and how it relates to Linux is too full of foolishness for me to even begin - Linux has spanned from embedded objects, to watches to machines that could win at Jeopardy and all points in-between.