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2008-11-20
, 04:15
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Posts: 259 |
Thanked: 72 times |
Joined on Dec 2007
@ Halifax, NS
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#22
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2008-11-20
, 04:16
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Posts: 4,783 |
Thanked: 1,253 times |
Joined on Aug 2007
@ norway
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#23
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8) iSilo (dunno what this is)
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2008-11-20
, 04:22
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Posts: 4,783 |
Thanked: 1,253 times |
Joined on Aug 2007
@ norway
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#24
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has way way way more software no matter what wacky Martian numbering system tso counts in
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2008-11-20
, 05:11
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Posts: 4,556 |
Thanked: 1,624 times |
Joined on Dec 2007
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#25
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2008-11-20
, 14:07
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Posts: 259 |
Thanked: 72 times |
Joined on Dec 2007
@ Halifax, NS
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#26
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At this point I know trying to have a civil talk is pointless with you. Try not to use baseless accusations next time and maybe people will listen.
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2008-11-20
, 14:40
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Posts: 25 |
Thanked: 2 times |
Joined on Aug 2008
@ Toronto, Canada
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#27
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2008-11-20
, 15:19
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Posts: 4,556 |
Thanked: 1,624 times |
Joined on Dec 2007
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#28
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Sorry if I offended, but my point was, as I stated, that an unjailbroken Touch gave us a LOT of desired functionality.
I really didn't want to hear the "x is good enough" argument again, because that's not what the topic was about, was it?
What exactly did you read as an accusation?
Yes yes yes, you're a hero because you can run everything above in emacs.
But you're the kinda guy that thinks that PocketInformant is the equivalent of cat "appointment" > file & grep `date` -. mCalendar, GPE Calendar and Erminig? Hey if you like broken sync and stacks of duplicate appointments go for it!
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2008-11-20
, 15:46
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Posts: 259 |
Thanked: 72 times |
Joined on Dec 2007
@ Halifax, NS
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#29
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I don't use emacs. While I do understand the power of the terminal, I like a GUI just as much as the next guy.
I've never found the sync broken, and the only problem I have with mcalendar now is that it downloads ALL of my Google Calendars (which is annoying so I'm waiting on the update) >.<. But Erminig does the job quite nicely without any issues so far.
But what I'm saying is, for me I could never find it useful compared to my internet tablet for what I do with it. To do what I do on the internet tablet on an iPhone or iPod touch would require jailbreaking.
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2008-11-20
, 16:42
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Posts: 17 |
Thanked: 1 time |
Joined on Jan 2008
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#30
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2) An accounting/cash management app (homebank, I can even sync the database with my Linux boxes.. very nice).
3) Checklist/shopping apps (I use notecase, again I can sync the databases. I use to use online websites but I like having offline capability as well)
4) a todo list that works, with more advanced ones (i.e. Things) available (how advanced do you need? I'm fine with notecase.. I use to do todos on rememberthemilk but I found it was inefficient)
5) Calendars that work (though simple, PocketInformant is on the way, huzzah!) (Mcalendar and calendar + erming). Syncs with Google calendar just fine
6) Fring (Fring)
7) Speed - PDF reading and zooming is very pleasant! (ok, but the small screen bugs me)
8) iSilo (dunno what this is)
9) Commercial developers willing to commit (see #9) (ok)
10) Great music and video management (meh, that's dependent on the user. I HATE HATE HATE iTunes. To me it's the worse music and video management out there, especially how they decide to create a seperate database when I already have my files organized). Btw, can you even drag and drop files into the iPod Touch / iPhone? Or do you have to use iTunes if you want it to show up in the media programs and what not? If so that's a weakness in my view (again it could be a strength to another). Especially as a primary Linux user (no iTunes and I don't feel like booting into Vista to use it).
Open source has helped plenty. Applications can be ported over from Linux already (in fact some of the ones used like homebank were). Then you also have projects like KDE and Debian porting which although a little slow (remember the processor of the tablet is like a Pentium P2. So if they n800 were given similar specs as the iPhone then it would be faster [thus n900 series?]) it brings alot of capability to the tablet. So again, I repeat.. to me an iPhone and iPod touch is only useful to me when I can jailbreak it (but my uses are alot different then most common users).
I'm personally looking forward to Android's development. It has the pros of the iPhone/iPod touch + the open sourceness and freedom that Linux provides.