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2010-06-22
, 11:24
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Posts: 35 |
Thanked: 27 times |
Joined on Jun 2008
@ Finland
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#32
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2010-07-13
, 14:51
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Posts: 134 |
Thanked: 25 times |
Joined on Dec 2007
@ New Jersey
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#33
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Also, I find it amusing to have my name used as a camp (ie. "I'm in the Dan Ramos camp...".Thanks.
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2010-07-13
, 15:01
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Posts: 1,390 |
Thanked: 642 times |
Joined on Nov 2007
@ California USA
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#34
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camp ramos, no cellular, wifi cellular |
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1) I'd only buy N900 with cellular radio
Good news, you can! There are also Androids and whatnot. The whole point of the exercise is to provide alternative feature set at alternative price point (cellular certification is more rigorous) and perhaps slightly different physical format as well.
2) No WIFI everywhere...
If you depend on always-on connection, either tether (you'd have two batteries...) or get a unified device like N900.
3) Busses, maps, GPS...
In first world cities and even long-haul routes WIFI is increasingly available even on public transport. Still, if you don't need to make those elusive video calls while sitting in a bus you still can use the tablet device in thousands of imaginative ways to entertain or educate yourself (and your neigbours). I'd still carry my slim and inexpensive mobile phone (with long battery life) around though; Skype etc. calls work just fine even with Bluetooth tethering and old-school EDGE connection (I've even dunnit in the Himalays!).
Incidentally a certain Finnish mobile phone manufacturer recently paid billions to buy a Very Large Map Company. Google Maps is cool, but you need either higher-end mobile phone with data contract or WIFI to use it. Nokia companion tablet with preloaded or downloadable Navteq maps and a GPS chip? How does one abbreviate Unique Selling Point?
In the past I've detailed various other pros for the alternative mobile companion approach, the most significant for Nokia being the ability to protect their lower-end S40 and Symbian marketshare and user-base with a lower-cost and shareable smart/tablet device. (get higher-end features on a relative shoestring...)
Cheaper and more ubiqitous tablet companions would also result in more Mae.. Meego platform support while balancing the current competitive marketshare balance. Esp. open-source developers might prefer cheaper devices, meaning they could also afford to buy newer versions more often (not least because contracts tend to run for up to 2 years!). E.g. RIM are rumoured to be introducing a tablet companion to their blackberry users. Maybe their guys have actually lurked here and listened to users??
Nokia has shown zero interest since prematurely killing the N8x0 line, but perhaps other 3rd party manufacturers will step in to cater to the segment. Unfortunately they may not enjoy Nokia's economies-of-scale in manufacturing (although their profit-margin requirements may likewise be far more moderate) or have adequate access or motivation to fully integrate the symbiotic tablet-phone tethering experience (as unfortunately Nokia never did).