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2009-06-12
, 19:09
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Posts: 3 |
Thanked: 0 times |
Joined on Apr 2008
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#102
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2009-06-12
, 19:13
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Posts: 362 |
Thanked: 109 times |
Joined on May 2009
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#103
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You should have added current generation android 1.5 phone to comparison: HTC Magic (out now already in few countries) or Samsung Galaxy (coming in june or next month). Android market also has already around 5000 programs.
NOTE: These android phones make bulky,ugly,too low battery life HTC G1 look very bad so dont compare anything to that please
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2009-06-12
, 19:56
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Posts: 362 |
Thanked: 109 times |
Joined on May 2009
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#104
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“A cigarette is the perfect type of a perfect pleasure. It is exquisite, and it leaves one unsatisfied. What more can one want?” (Oscar Wilde)
"A smartphone!" (me)
Nokia top-notch phone customers have never been left really unsatisfied, because those devices are truly amazing, well built, feature rich and pleasant to at least three out of five senses; but, as you quoted above, a number of guys, including me, think that a higher level of satisfaction will never be pursued. And this, for a legitimate commercial purpose, which is the same of Oscar's cigarette-makers: make their business thrive.
You see, I am still sorely ruminating about the transition from the Nokia 9500 to the E90 Communicator. The 9500 had an excellent operating system (series 80) - you're an expert in this field so I don't need to explain more - but that was ditched in favour of a regression to a more primitive interface which needs more keypresses to get same results, drops copy/paste from browser (! this still calls for vengeance), word/excel compatibility, and lots of refinements which you'll able to remind going back to symbian-related forums of those times.
And this is my pet argument because I've been a Communicator addict; but I bet you have found similar complaints in all those people from AllAboutSymbian (was it AllAboutSeries80 once, didn't it? %^) that you quoted in your answer, for other phones.
Originally Posted by krisseIMHO you get a perfect phone when you go on refining and adding features to an already almost perfect phone, without losing the winning points, and that is evolution. Not when you abruptly abandon a well-functioning line and force your customers to a devolution, no matter how you try to hide it.>> In any case, what exactly would this "perfect" phone be?
That is the thing I still hope won't happen with our tablets but is feared by many, here.
quote krisse
>> What about form factors...
>> What if someone wants a phone that...
Come on, Nokia sells *hundreds* of models. They must have an exceptional ability in diversifying their assembling lines. They're already making phones for literaly every taste.
So why don't they do the perfect phone?
Originally Posted by krisseThey are reasoning like Nokia maybe. But now comes the exception...> And even if a perfect phone was possible, why isn't ANYONE making it right now? Nokia isn't the only phone maker, why isn't Samsung or S-E or LG or Moto or Apple making a perfect phone?
quote krisse
> The biggest flaw in the "perfect phone" conspiracy theory is Apple.
> Apple only makes one phone model at a time, so why are there so many gaps in their phone specs? [...] Why would they release an imperfect phone if a perfect phone was possible?
They have been in mobile phones for a time that's a fraction of that of Nokia, but they're learning.
And they're dangerously (for Nokia) getting close to the perfect phone. Their iterations are in the sense of evolution as I described above. They are not making a whole collection of models, each one lacking something (Oscar Wilde's perfect pleasure); they're building on a single model making it better and better. And the market seems to appreciate
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2009-06-12
, 23:41
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Posts: 5,478 |
Thanked: 5,222 times |
Joined on Jan 2006
@ St. Petersburg, FL
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#105
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It is good N900 uses OMAP3 (same as iPhone 3GS and Palm Pre) because is a Cortex ARMv7 - more power.
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2009-06-13
, 02:37
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Posts: 362 |
Thanked: 109 times |
Joined on May 2009
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#106
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2009-06-13
, 05:14
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Posts: 42 |
Thanked: 4 times |
Joined on Apr 2008
@ Canada
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#107
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I don't know much about HTC Magic Android 1.5 device, but if you can compose a column for it, I will edit my first post and I will add that column. What processor is it using? What about the RAM?
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2009-06-13
, 17:10
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Posts: 3 |
Thanked: 0 times |
Joined on Apr 2008
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#108
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2009-06-16
, 13:29
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Posts: 861 |
Thanked: 734 times |
Joined on Jan 2008
@ Nomadic
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#110
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ARM11
Nokia N97 and 5800 use Freescale MXC300-30 (ARMv6) (same as Nokia E71, Nokia E75)
N800, N810 and N95 use Texas Instruments OMAP2420
It is good N900 uses OMAP3 (same as iPhone 3GS and Palm Pre) because is a Cortex ARMv7 - more power.
Is Freescale MXC300-30 and Ti OMAP2420 (both ARMv6) 100% compatible? - they should be because they run the same RISC instruction of ARMv6 specification, but they are build by different manufacturers...