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2012-06-20
, 21:03
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Posts: 322 |
Thanked: 218 times |
Joined on Feb 2012
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#22
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But it is very likely. If WP8 was capable of running on the next gen "low-end" hardware (say 1 GHz Cortex A8 kinda performance), it should be possible to bring WP8 to the current Lumia 800/900 phones. So that makes me suspect WP8 will require multi cores scorpion/A9/krait/A15 to run correctly, or other hardware upgrades (more RAM possibly or a bigger boot flash partition).
When will those type of chips be pushed to the low-end? End of 2013? 2014? And what should developers do until then? Target the select group of WP8 customers, or use only WP7 features?
I'm very curious how this turns out.
In any case the low-end android phones also have big problems. I think the sub 200 euro android-hardware is really bad, and they also have no upgrade path. Compared to those phones the Lumia 610 looks wonderful and the software is smooth. A great choice imo, even without software upgrades.
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2012-06-20
, 21:09
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Posts: 468 |
Thanked: 610 times |
Joined on Jun 2006
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#23
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WP8 is to bring NFC (amongst other things). But the "610 NFC" already has NFC, and it is running Tango. Any idea what this is all about?
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2012-06-20
, 21:13
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Posts: 273 |
Thanked: 463 times |
Joined on May 2011
@ Athens
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#24
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The Following User Says Thank You to Zoxir For This Useful Post: | ||
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2012-06-20
, 21:18
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Posts: 322 |
Thanked: 218 times |
Joined on Feb 2012
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#25
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Although I am the largest fan/supporter of Maemo, the above is not completely true, although we all pretty much knew that Windows 8 was coming, and the Lumia/Windows 7.5 processors would probably not handle the workload or be compatible...
The N9 will live on while these lumias will be phased out early, as are any 1st gen commercial enterprise products...
Microsoft is however promising the world for Windows 8 phones, dual core, huge ram, 16:9 720p, etc...as well as AT LEAST 1.5 years of firmware updates guarenteed....we will see if the 1.5 years of firmware updates come true, if so, this is quite amazing, since no OEMs do this. (Other than Apple with their yearly refresh/possible update)
Now, google does not do this, b/c they are completely fragmented, and iOS does not update as often...I am interested to see if MSFT can make these promises come true.
I am a bit skeptical, but at least they are being honest...I purchased the 770 with first gen Maemo, and then Nokia killed it quickly, no upgrade capability...same with the 800 for my cousin...then the N900 for myself, which Nokia killed with the announcement of Maemo 6 a few months after its release...Maemo community kept it alive...now I have the N9, which was technically killed months prerelease, but we will keep this alive as well...
Lumia can't be kept alive like the N9 though...so to the suckers who purchased it (pointing at one famous troll here), a big Nelson "HaHAA", and hopefully Windows 8 can bring life to Nokia, which still has the best hardware and map support...if they can couple this OS with the best hardware, they have Samsung beaten already (worst quality materials out there).
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2012-06-20
, 21:34
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Posts: 468 |
Thanked: 610 times |
Joined on Jun 2006
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#27
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I have a feeling that WP8 requires extremely high end chips/RAM to even turn the engine properly, not to mention running apps. And what about WP7.X ? Seriously, there is something that's not right here. Just last week Nokia was talking about WP7 being pushed far down to low end. I don't see how all this add up.
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2012-06-20
, 21:50
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Posts: 1,326 |
Thanked: 1,524 times |
Joined on Mar 2010
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#28
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I have a feeling that WP8 requires extremely high end chips/RAM to even turn the engine properly, not to mention running apps. And what about WP7.X ? Seriously, there is something that's not right here. Just last week Nokia was talking about WP7 being pushed far down to low end. I don't see how all this add up.
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2012-06-20
, 21:57
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Posts: 468 |
Thanked: 610 times |
Joined on Jun 2006
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#29
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MS is doing the right thing. They are upgrading an already smooth platform , and incrementally making it better. Unlike the N9 failure
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2012-06-20
, 22:18
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Guest |
Posts: n/a |
Thanked: 0 times |
Joined on
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#30
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A similar sentiment is on gizmodo.
And when you look at the future windows platform i think you are right, Microsoft has to do it this way.
But in the short term microsoft almost has to start from scratch because of this reset. In the short term this will slow-down the growth of the ecosystem. High-end phone customers will wait for the WP8 devices, and developers will focus on the functions that are also in the low-end WP7 devices, since those are in use.
Microsoft is betting that the entire Windows 8 ecosystem will explode in size because of simultaneous phone, tablet and desktop launches.
I fear all three will have extremely slow adoption because of the size of the change and hardware prices.
I also think that application development will remain very much separate for tablet, phone and desktop even with the shared metro interface.
But I could be wrong
The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to For This Useful Post: | ||
The N9 will live on while these lumias will be phased out early, as are any 1st gen commercial enterprise products...
Microsoft is however promising the world for Windows 8 phones, dual core, huge ram, 16:9 720p, etc...as well as AT LEAST 1.5 years of firmware updates guarenteed....we will see if the 1.5 years of firmware updates come true, if so, this is quite amazing, since no OEMs do this. (Other than Apple with their yearly refresh/possible update)
Now, google does not do this, b/c they are completely fragmented, and iOS does not update as often...I am interested to see if MSFT can make these promises come true.
I am a bit skeptical, but at least they are being honest...I purchased the 770 with first gen Maemo, and then Nokia killed it quickly, no upgrade capability...same with the 800 for my cousin...then the N900 for myself, which Nokia killed with the announcement of Maemo 6 a few months after its release...Maemo community kept it alive...now I have the N9, which was technically killed months prerelease, but we will keep this alive as well...
Lumia can't be kept alive like the N9 though...so to the suckers who purchased it (pointing at one famous troll here), a big Nelson "HaHAA", and hopefully Windows 8 can bring life to Nokia, which still has the best hardware and map support...if they can couple this OS with the best hardware, they have Samsung beaten already (worst quality materials out there).