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#21
if you read the full interview, they mention 2 phones. first out the door is more locked down as you've stated, for the less technically inclined. second is likely to be more open, more of a developer device.

i suppose the idea is to push a mass market device first to build brand.
 

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#22
Open, closed, open, closed, open, closed, open, closed. Is It open? Is It closed? Open, closed, open...
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I don't trust poeple without a Nokia n900...
 

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#23
Originally Posted by Android_808 View Post
if you read the full interview, they mention 2 phones. first out the door is more locked down as you've stated, for the less technically inclined. second is likely to be more open, more of a developer device.

[...]
with a hardware keyboard ?!? :-D
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#24
" We did not expect that people will misinterpret this statement. As for the open part: Just follow what we are doing with Mer and Nemo -- our development there is completely in the open, and try to figure out how we would benefit from working on community projects now, only to later annoy them with a locked phone " posted by employee of jolla....
so, it is more-less like harmattan but seems like without aegis
guess more open than we figured :S
 

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#25
Do you really want to own dinghy phones?
 

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#26
better than fruit phones
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#27
there will be developer mode so you can hack to your hearts content
 
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#28
Originally Posted by Lumiaman View Post
Do you really want to own dinghy phones?
always better then Titanic ¦-))))))))))))))))))))))))
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#29
Originally Posted by misterc View Post
the only reason Android is so successful is because it is so open.
1st:
Android isn't successful because it's open but because it's "end-user friendly" (whatever that means - most people can use it intuitively).
My father is a good example for this. He has a Galaxy S2 and has what is usually called "advanced computer skills": He can maintain his Windows PC, is clever enough to avoid the common PEBKAC problems and in theory knows how to code. But he hasn't coded himself for more than 20 years now, so he couldn't care less about his phone's operating system being open source.

2nd:
Google frequently fails to deliver the source code as required by #2 of the open source definition [1] and has to be reminded very often to release it.
Also, even though it's not strictly a failure in terms of the OSD #2 & #3 since these paragraphs only refer to the license Google's Android is (or at least has been in the past when I checked) technically designed to make derived works hard without ripping the whole system apart and putting it back together from scratch. For example in Android 2.2 it was not possible even on a rooted phone to load additional kernel modules simply because the /system partition where these modules HAD to be stored had virtually no free space left. Resizing the partition was not possible due to automated integrity checks that complained about wrong partition sizes.

bottom line:
Yes, strictly spoken Android is open source by the terms of the OSD once they released the source code. But if you don't go by the definition but by the spirit of open source Android is not open. Google only makes it as open as is required by the licenses they are obliged to respect. Unfortunately this kind of openness is worthless.

[1] http://opensource.org/docs/osd
 

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#30
Originally Posted by misterc View Post
with a hardware keyboard ?!? :-D
They haven't released any specifications yet, and won't do until the time is right. Why say were going ship a device with X amount of RAM, Y GHz etc now, when there may be better options or more constraints nearer the time.

Full interview
http://www.ossimantylahti.com/2012/0...ging-director/
 

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