Reply
Thread Tools
GeneralAntilles's Avatar
Posts: 5,478 | Thanked: 5,222 times | Joined on Jan 2006 @ St. Petersburg, FL
#11
Originally Posted by Charbax View Post
I'm not complaining, I'm just posting my suggestions for the N900, that Nokia hopefully will show at the CES in a couple of months. I would actually prefer a device without a built-in keyboard. To me adding 30gr, removing the two SD card slots and removing the speakers was not worth adding a sliding keyboard, especially such a small keyboard. Or maybe it would be nicest to have somekind of compact foldable keyboard design be the solid screen protector like the sliding screen protector of the N770. I prefer the external full sized foldable keyboard for any serious typing.

And especially for N900, I'd expect Nokia to provide better video support, tv-out, DVR, transflective screen, built-in HSDPA and WiMax.
The speakers are still there, and I, personally, think Wimax/HSDPA is both wasteful and unnecessarily costly. I can see the point in a Sprint-branded Wimax unit that's separate from the regular retail Nokia units, but I already have an HSDPA phone, and don't desire plopping down another $60/mo to get service for my IT.
 
Posts: 6 | Thanked: 0 times | Joined on Oct 2007
#12
Here in Denmark it's $30 for a data-only HSDPA plan with a transfer limit of 10GB per month, so the idea of having HSDPA built-in would be to replace the need to have a mobile phone and never have to pay voice and sms fees again.

It would require also that the device stay connected to be able to ring on incomming IP packets on certain protocols such as VOIP, IM, push email notification and such while the rest of the device should be in sleep mode.
 
GeneralAntilles's Avatar
Posts: 5,478 | Thanked: 5,222 times | Joined on Jan 2006 @ St. Petersburg, FL
#13
Originally Posted by Charbax View Post
Here in Denmark it's $30 for a data-only HSDPA plan with a transfer limit of 10GB per month, so the idea of having HSDPA built-in would be to replace the need to have a mobile phone and never have to pay voice and sms fees again.

It would require also that the device stay connected to be able to ring on incomming IP packets on certain protocols such as VOIP, IM, push email notification and such while the rest of the device should be in sleep mode.
Yeah, no device is going to be able to stay idling on a Voip connection for more than 6 hours over HSDPA. So I don't see how that can replace a real mobile phone.
 
Posts: 3,841 | Thanked: 1,079 times | Joined on Nov 2006
#14
I have an HSDPA thingy plugged into a wireless home router and thus have no need for HSDPA in the NIT - I'm online through HSDPA+wifi already. And in addition the rest of the computers in the house are too.
Besides, HSDPA _sucks_ power.
__________________
N800/OS2007|N900/Maemo5
-- Metalayer-crawler delenda est.
-- Current state: Fed up with everything MeeGo.
 
Posts: 73 | Thanked: 3 times | Joined on Sep 2007 @ USA
#15
I like your idea but how 'bout a step further. A D-pad is no match for a real mouse. How 'bout an optical mouse like the Everrun has. That would be sweet.
 
Posts: 41 | Thanked: 2 times | Joined on May 2007
#16
I would :
* put the 5-way and minimal hard buttons on the top, just like their own freaking N-series phones!

* Use dual microSD slots or 1 microSD+1 SD slot, You know, the same type their own freaking phones use! MiniSD is so wrong on so many levels. What, Nokia you expect your user base to be Treo 750 and 680 owners?! And the fact that I KNOW they are going to switch to microSD on N900 make me sick.

* Make the speakers louder, so you can actually use it on occations that need it, for example, on a train table, on a pinic table, on a beach etc.

* Make it $70 more than the n800. I don't know why they drop the price on the n800 so soon and I don't care, but the n810 shouldn't cost more than a 800 plus a GPS receiver.

* Keep the same cellphone battery but upgrade the capacity (is that what they are doing now?)

Otherwise I am indifferent to the n810's other hardware changes, I know they are gimmicks that use to draw in new buyers but, meh.

Last edited by whatever7; 2007-10-19 at 21:09.
 
Guest | Posts: n/a | Thanked: 0 times | Joined on
#17
Originally Posted by whatever7 View Post
* Keep the same cellphone battery but upgrade the capacity (is that what they are doing now?)

Well from some of the hand's on pics it seems the battery is going to be of the same capacity as the Nokia N800 (1500 mAh). Agleast that is what I'm seeing from Engadget's hands on http://www.engadget.com/photos/nokia...nds-on/443977/.
 
Posts: 144 | Thanked: 0 times | Joined on Dec 2005 @ Niles IL...Chicago born and raised.
#18
[Major Rant]

People will NEVER be happy...

The 770 doesn't have a keyboard...boo hoo hoo...
The N800 doesn't have a keyboard...boo hoo hoo...
The N810 has a keyboard that I don't like...boo....hoo......hoo

Come on people...the device isn't even out yet.

The 770 was bashed up and down for all the things it couldn't do, when people didn't give the device much credit for how well it did what it was advertised to do.

N800 got the same treatment.

Everyone hears "Linux based" and it's automatically supped to be able to wake you up, plan out your day, let you build the most advanced applications in the world, hold you when you're down, give you a BJ, and the list goes on...

Meanwhile, it's a device that fits in your hand...I'm sorry for ranting, but it's sad how the unit isn't officially released, and there are already posts about "how it should be done"...if you feel that strongly about it, design one yourself...patent it, and develop it.[/Major Rant]
 
Posts: 41 | Thanked: 2 times | Joined on May 2007
#19
That's nonsenes, I don't need to be a chef to comment on how good the meal is. If you don't want to hear any criticism you don't have to come to this forum lol.
 
pixelseventy2's Avatar
Posts: 357 | Thanked: 115 times | Joined on Sep 2007 @ Sunny England :)
#20
I'm just constantly amused by everyone *****ing about how the keyboard won't be any good for "serious typing". I don't imagine that anyone at Nokia intended it for that purpose, and more than BlackBerry intended their devices to be used for much more than quick emails. The keyboard on the n810 would be ideal for IMing, quick emails, or quick entries on web sites, and unlike the on-screen keyboard you can see what you are doing. If you want to write an essay or really long email, you can still use a bluetooth (and possibly usb) keyboard.
 
Reply


 
Forum Jump


All times are GMT. The time now is 02:59.