Enyibinakata
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2009-10-29
, 00:59
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Posts: 288 |
Thanked: 196 times |
Joined on Oct 2009
@ London
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#231
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The Following 4 Users Say Thank You to Enyibinakata For This Useful Post: | ||
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2009-10-29
, 01:07
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Posts: 1,097 |
Thanked: 650 times |
Joined on Nov 2007
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#232
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2009-10-29
, 01:12
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Posts: 1,096 |
Thanked: 760 times |
Joined on Dec 2008
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#233
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2009-10-29
, 01:30
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Posts: 1,878 |
Thanked: 646 times |
Joined on Sep 2007
@ San Jose, CA
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#234
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This is not a zero sum game - Maemo does not have to kill Droid and vice versa.
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2009-10-29
, 01:32
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Posts: 1,878 |
Thanked: 646 times |
Joined on Sep 2007
@ San Jose, CA
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#235
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what is the big gold area in the middle of the dpad? I mean, what in the world is it?
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2009-10-29
, 01:41
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Posts: 1,255 |
Thanked: 393 times |
Joined on Oct 2009
@ US
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#236
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2009-10-29
, 01:51
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Posts: 203 |
Thanked: 68 times |
Joined on Oct 2009
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#237
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Garmin and TomTom's gravy days are over. The Nuviphone won't save Garmin like they're hoping. It's a so-so design with yet another proprietary Linux-based OS. Too bad, 'cause Garmin is based here in Kansas City so soon some locals may loose jobs. Lotsa luck to 'em.
But the major flaw in Google Maps is no maps are stored on the phone so they don't work without a 'net connection. One of the things that will be great about the N900 is even when I'm way out in the sticks with no signal (which happens a lot) the GPS and maps will still work 'cause I can download and store map data on the phone. With my G1 I'm just still lost.
The Following User Says Thank You to cb474 For This Useful Post: | ||
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2009-10-29
, 01:51
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Posts: 1,878 |
Thanked: 646 times |
Joined on Sep 2007
@ San Jose, CA
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#238
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And this is where I am a bit sceptical of the Linux open source developers - I have always as a end user wanted apps
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2009-10-29
, 02:02
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Posts: 4,556 |
Thanked: 1,624 times |
Joined on Dec 2007
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#239
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Today when I say the Goole navigation app with Street View, turn by turn navigation etc, I was really impressed. Frankly I still whip out my N95 rather than my N810 when I need to see some maps. The N95 simply wins since it has Google maps. Now with this free turn by turn navigation - Android 2.0 is imcreasingly looking more attarctive.
The Droid hardware is not what cuts the mustard - its the software and the apps. Frankly - as a end user I care less about philosophies of openness etc (I do care some) rather than firstly satisfying my use cases.
Unless Google maps comes to Maemo (and Nokia should pursue this), GPS functionality on Maemo leaves much to be desired.
And to top it off, I use Google Mail, contacts, docs, notebook so Android has that advantage of integration with Google services. I do like that part.
The rest of the arguments about Android being less open, Dalvik being slower, Google being more evil, Verizon being a stiffling company - all these matter as a secondary point to me. Primary issue is what withh a device do for me apps wise.
And this is where I am a bit sceptical of the Linux open source developers - I have always as a end user wanted apps - consumer apps, but since the Zaurus days I see linux devs "porting" system tools and claiming app counts. Frankly - I am no sys admin - so VNC, curl, SFTP, SSH, and all that matter less to me as "applications" I want apps which will fulfill my end user need like Stocks monitor, portfolio manager, timesheet app, project planning, note taking, reminders and tasks todo's, and all these types.
During the Zaurus days I was very dissapointed in this aspect. With Maemo I am more positive about it - but still the geekiness around me sometimes makes me sceptical a bit.
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2009-10-29
, 02:05
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Posts: 1,878 |
Thanked: 646 times |
Joined on Sep 2007
@ San Jose, CA
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#240
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It seems you should be in the Android camp and not Maemo camp then.
Tags |
comparison, competition, droid, fight, milestone, motorola droid, motorola milestone, n900, nokia n900 |
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