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2010-07-06
, 21:05
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Posts: 267 |
Thanked: 408 times |
Joined on May 2010
@ Austria
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#212
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So now they're broadcasting your phone number and kidnapping you? I give up. Reading your poor analogies is like being raped by an oil-coated BP capture boat captain dressed as Arthur C. Clarke.
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2010-07-07
, 02:01
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Posts: n/a |
Thanked: 0 times |
Joined on
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#213
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The Following User Says Thank You to For This Useful Post: | ||
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2010-07-07
, 02:32
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Posts: 5,478 |
Thanked: 5,222 times |
Joined on Jan 2006
@ St. Petersburg, FL
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#214
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But shouldn't it? I mean, it is under the Linux Foundation. So why would closed bits be in the way or included?
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2010-07-07
, 02:44
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Joined on
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#215
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Because the mobile hardware industry is how it is, and expecting to ship a usable, 100% open distribution on reasonable hardware isn't currently realistic.
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2010-07-07
, 03:40
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Posts: 5,795 |
Thanked: 3,151 times |
Joined on Feb 2007
@ Agoura Hills Calif
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#216
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That app was installed on your device on day one, along with at least a few other installer apps (facebook, om weather, etc). You may have not noticed it until recently, but it's always been there. And if you re-flash your device, it will again be there, since it's part of the base image. Most of them are simple apps that do nothing but launch the app manager with a command line to install the app it's pointing to. Most of them were on the desktop by default, so a new owner could easily get a few widgets just by clicking them.
I monitor all my installs (and fs usage), and can tell you there are no apps (outside the initial set) that I didn't install myself. I have about 40 apps showing in the app manager uninstall list, and to the one I've asked for each one to be installed. If you're seeing something being installed on your device that you didn't ask for, then something you've put on it is causing this behavior. It's not part of the base image from Nokia or Maemo. If it were, everyone would be seeing it.
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2010-07-07
, 04:05
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Posts: 1,746 |
Thanked: 2,100 times |
Joined on Sep 2009
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#217
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Then what is the difference between it and the others? You're just as locked in and you have to basically hack or find a way to get another OS onto that mobile hardware handset; do you not?
To a layman, the difference(s) are starting to get minor and "most open" is now easily relegated to marketing talk.
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2010-07-07
, 05:27
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Posts: n/a |
Thanked: 0 times |
Joined on
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#218
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By October, it should technically be possible to "roll your own" complete with battery charging and 3D support. The goal, effectively, is to isolate and minimize the closed bits such that the greater OS is not impacted by it. We then pull in vendor support to ensure that the closed bits are available for whatever purposes the licensees (Nokia, you) desire for them.
The layman has always been that way. If we want something to be as open as possible -we- need to push for it. We also need to make sure that we don't trade off usability for openness, and really there is no reason to.
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2010-07-07
, 22:37
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Posts: 4,672 |
Thanked: 5,455 times |
Joined on Jul 2008
@ Springfield, MA, USA
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#219
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2010-07-08
, 18:53
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Posts: 11,700 |
Thanked: 10,045 times |
Joined on Jun 2006
@ North Texas, USA
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#220
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Agreeing with the sentiment: If "that's the way the industry is" is your excuse, you're not really convincing me that MeeGo/Nokia is fundamentally any more open or better.
!!all your base are belong to us!! And then they did the robot with some cheeses bass in the background.