Poll: N900 vs Milestone
Poll Options
N900 vs Milestone

Reply
Thread Tools
GeneralAntilles's Avatar
Posts: 5,478 | Thanked: 5,222 times | Joined on Jan 2006 @ St. Petersburg, FL
#171
Originally Posted by sschueller View Post
Getting back to my original post. It looks like the design is very close to the final one (Verizon sent out this mailer: http://www.boygeniusreport.com/2009/...scare-children) and I still think it is quite an ugly device.
That keyboard just screams mid-90s.
__________________
Ryan Abel
 
Posts: 4,556 | Thanked: 1,624 times | Joined on Dec 2007
#172
One thing I've been wondering about that device that bugs me..

I do like the dpad on there.. but why on earth is it on the right side and not left?
__________________
Originally Posted by ysss View Post
They're maemo and MeeGo...

"Meamo!" sounds like what Zorro would say to catherine zeta jones... after she slaps him for looking at her dirtily...
 
Posts: 203 | Thanked: 68 times | Joined on Oct 2009
#173
Originally Posted by Laughing Man View Post
Google does at least give you the option of leaving their cloud with all your data. So if you do want to switch your more then welcome to. They're currently working on ways to output all your data so you can take it anywhere you want.
Yes, Google isn't as heavy handed as Microsoft or Apple, in its attempts to control everything. They do it by just offering really slick and well integrated applications and services, then hoping that the convenience of it all will slowly make people not think about the competition or what options they may be lacking. It's more of a Brave New World strategy than a 1984 strategy. That is, Google wants to placate people into complacency, rather than force them into submission. But the end results may be more of a closed experience for most people (even if the exit door is right there), than Microsoft's greatest dreams.

Last edited by cb474; 2009-10-21 at 07:55.
 

The Following User Says Thank You to cb474 For This Useful Post:
gecebekcisi's Avatar
Posts: 103 | Thanked: 45 times | Joined on Oct 2009 @ Istanbul, Turkey
#174
Originally Posted by cb474 View Post
even if the exit door is right there
It seems we may need to relocate to a remote village to find that door.
 
christexaport's Avatar
Posts: 1,589 | Thanked: 720 times | Joined on Aug 2009 @ Arlington (DFW), Texas
#175
Originally Posted by GeneralAntilles View Post
Perhaps one of the reasons you've been having trouble on these forums over the past few weeks is because you're not assuming good faith? Not immediately assuming people are reacting aggressively or condescendingly to your posts and the posts of others would be a good place to start. Treating them like children is also probably not the best strategy for maintaining civil discussions, no?
No, GA. I'm bipolar, and was overworked and hadn't been eating and sleeping regularly during those couple weeks, and it had an adverse effect on my mental health. I was just being more combative than usual, not my normal self. I'm actually having very little trouble here, and have grown to love it. You make a good point, and I'll take all that into consideration. I'm rarely that difficult, as you'll see over time. You'll probably look back and wonder what the hell was my problem, and now you know.

I want you to take some advice from me as well. I wasn't implying that you are rude, since you seem to be a genius in terms of Maemo. But you have a penchant for sarcasm and jokes, and I wanted a good answer from you, not one you'd give the older members with more knowledge. When you said:
Originally Posted by GeneralAntilles View Post
Er, yeah, "Maemo".
when I said there was a Chinese Maemo device, it made it seem like I had made an incorrect statement, and you were in obvious sarcasm mode, but you didn't elaborate. I knew you knew something I didn't, so I wanted the scoop. That's all. Nothing personal, and didn't think you were acting aggressively nor rude. Just wanted to know why it was "Maemo" and not Maemo, which implied it wasn't at all.

Do you have any documentation to show its not really Maemo, and that it knocks on Nokia's trademarks? I noticed the CEO of the company described the OS as a combination of Linux and Android, and didn't seem to either be able to or want to tell what OS it ran, and that gave me reason for pause, so I felt something weird was amiss.
__________________
Maemo-Freak.com
"...and the Freaks shall inherit the Earth."
 
GeneralAntilles's Avatar
Posts: 5,478 | Thanked: 5,222 times | Joined on Jan 2006 @ St. Petersburg, FL
#176
Originally Posted by christexaport View Post
Do you have any documentation to show its not really Maemo, and that it knocks on Nokia's trademarks? I noticed the CEO of the company described the OS as a combination of Linux and Android, and didn't seem to either be able to or want to tell what OS it ran, and that gave me reason for pause, so I felt something weird was amiss.
Well, first, as I said earlier, Nokia doesn't license Maemo, so any other device manufacturer claiming to be running Maemo isn't.

Second, Maemo doesn't run Safari. . . .



What they did was take some of the open source components from the Maemo 4 SDK, slap them together with some stuff from Android and regular old desktop Linux and then called it Maemo. It's nothing of the sort.
__________________
Ryan Abel
 

The Following User Says Thank You to GeneralAntilles For This Useful Post:
christexaport's Avatar
Posts: 1,589 | Thanked: 720 times | Joined on Aug 2009 @ Arlington (DFW), Texas
#177
Thanks for that info. Now I can start ignoring and researching this device as much as I have. Chinese translations from Google aren't always ideal...
__________________
Maemo-Freak.com
"...and the Freaks shall inherit the Earth."
 
Posts: 1 | Thanked: 0 times | Joined on Oct 2009
#178
Originally Posted by beelerb View Post
Pros [of the Droid on Verizon]:
1. Greater higher speed data network access than (most likely) anyone else in the US. Verizon has great coverage. This is a huge pro for some folks but IMO overrated for many.
2. Java. It'll be here soon for the N900 but not today.

Cons:
1. It's a Motorola. Once they built nice mobiles but IMO not anymore. When Nokia wants to build first class hardware they can and do it better then anyone else. The fit and finish on my trusty E61i is impressive. I have yet to find a Moto device that compares.
2. Locking users and most apps out of the GPS chipset ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Verizon...ertain_devices )
3. Verizon customer service, while better than AT&T is still a far cry from TMO. I've been with TMO since the VS days and their customer service has always been excellent.
4. The Droid is mostly new while many parts of the N900 have been in use since the 770. New designs are never perfect (like the WSOD on the 770). The N900 should have less defects due to it's maturity.
5. Android is still pretty locked down compared to the N900. The idea of buying hardware and having to hack though useless layers of security to run my own stuff is odious. My money, my hardware. While Android is better then most it's still not as free as the N900.
6. No control key. How are you suppose to use emacs? =)

Either way:
1. Cost. While the unsubsidized price will likely be less than the N900 the subsidized price could be more considering Verizon's rates [compared to TMO].

In the end I believe the two devices mostly address different audiences and are not strongly competing against each other. It looks like from the ad I saw they're directly going after the iPhone which IMO is bound to fail. No one beats Apple at a game they created.
LOL!
Tell that to bill gates
PC>MAC (as far as $$$ sales go, which is the bottom line)
 
Posts: 607 | Thanked: 450 times | Joined on Sep 2009 @ Washington, DC
#179
Originally Posted by cb474 View Post
They do it by just offering really slick and well integrated applications and services, then hoping that the convenience of it all will slowly make people not think about the competition or what options they may be lacking.
So I should support clunky and poorly integrated applications and services just to spite Google? Is that Maemo's new strategy?

If you want to debate the merits of Google's implementation of Linux versus Nokia's implementation of Linux or Motorola's phone versus Nokia's phone or even Google's use of closed source applications versus Nokia's use of closed source applications, fine.

But does every mention of Android have to result in attacks on Google? It's as if I jumped into every N900 thread to complain that Nokia is evil because they refuse to write an OS which will allow me to update my N810 to Maemo 5.
 

The Following User Says Thank You to DaveP1 For This Useful Post:
Posts: 367 | Thanked: 176 times | Joined on Oct 2009
#180
Originally Posted by cb474 View Post
I think this is a very apt analysis, The winning strategy will be making the OS a hardware independent commodity. It's Windows vs. Apple all over again. The thing that positions Google so well is that their revenue stream is not based on selling/licensing the OS. It's based on tying people into their universe of services and then advertising to them. This gives Google a unique position. Microsoft can't do it (or their attemtps at it keep failing--Google just has too big of a head start) and has to license WinMo. Apple won't do it (they want to control the hardware and software). Likewise for Palm and Nokia really. These three all need to sell the device to make money. But it's a huge opening for Sony Ericsson, Motorola, HTC, Acer, Dell, and other not yet existent device manufacturers, on the device side, with Google being the big winner.

One problem of course with Android/Google is not just the technical question of it's halfway open, halfway closed OS. The problem is that Google will always be strategizing to suck people further and further into it's universe of services. Of course, there a privacy concerns. But this is also a limitation of choice in and of itself. In the long run, Google could become a monopoly controlling your desktop experience in a way that makes Microsofts attempts at this pale in comparison. I presonally would really rather not have Google suck up the entire world and I try to avoid being part of that. So I really appreciate Nokia making Maemo so open (but I also worry it will always remain a niche product).
I couldn't say anything else.

I'm considering making a campain about making an official general Google boycott. Hopefully there'll be enough people interested by then...
 

The Following User Says Thank You to c0rt3x For This Useful Post:
Reply

Tags
comparison, competition, droid, fight, milestone, motorola droid, motorola milestone, n900, nokia n900


 
Forum Jump


All times are GMT. The time now is 22:05.