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2009-10-26
, 13:57
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@ Sheffield, UK
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#2
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The Following User Says Thank You to Alex Atkin UK For This Useful Post: | ||
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2009-10-26
, 14:14
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Joined on Sep 2009
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#3
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2009-10-26
, 14:24
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@ OVI MAPS
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#4
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2009-10-26
, 14:27
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@ US
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#5
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I would have thought your expectations would be lower, knowing it has full Linux inside compared to the iPhone which is BSD stripped down.
How much stuff was running when you were playing with it? You have to consider the iPhone when you move from one application to the next, it closes the application. The N900 however may need to swap because it doesn't close unless you ask it to do so.
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2009-10-26
, 14:34
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#6
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2009-10-26
, 14:42
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#7
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2009-10-26
, 14:48
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@ Pennsylvania, USA
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#8
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The Following User Says Thank You to sjgadsby For This Useful Post: | ||
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2009-10-26
, 14:54
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@ Spain
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#9
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The Following 4 Users Say Thank You to GodLikeCreature For This Useful Post: | ||
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2009-10-26
, 15:11
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Joined on Aug 2009
@ DC
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#10
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The Following 6 Users Say Thank You to sevla For This Useful Post: | ||
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god, your 15 minutes r up |
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Just back from a brief trip to NY and I had a chance to taste the N900, which was on display at their Manhattan Nokia store. I actually was hoping I could buy it, but they told me it was not in production yet and that they had no dates for when that will happen! :-(
Anyways, I was able to spend a few minutes playing around with it, obviously not in any depth, but enough to get a feel of the looks, the UI, and a bit of the functionality.
In terms of looks, I found it a bit big, but in a good way. The phone feels solid and like a reliable piece of hardware, nothing like certain HTCs... ;-)
As far as the UI goes, I guess that's what left me a bit cold. It does have a definitive GTK linux feel to it, but felt a bit poor to me. I guess it looked poor in the same way a Gnome desktop does right after installation. When that happens in a desktop, it is not that big a deal, most of the times the person installing was planning to change everything anyways.
However, in a phone... I don't know, I feel lots of people will feel interested about the N900 simply because it is a high end Nokia phone, because they want to have the latest and greatest... But when they look at it and compare it to an iPhone or perhaps an HTC Hero with Android, they are probably going to feel like the N900 is ugly as hell... ;-) I guess I was expecting a bigger and more sleek work as far as the UI goes, I felt a bit disappointed.
Another element that caught my attention was the speed in moving from menu to menu, when opening applications, etc. While it was much faster than any symbian phone I have used, it seemed slow when compared to how the new iPhone and some Android phones I have seen. It was nothing major, just a bit in loading stuff, but I guess my expectations were very high considering the power and the fact that it is a "real" Linux heart inside.
Anyways, it's not much, I know, but like I was saying, I just had a few minutes, and I wanted to share my impressions.