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2011-12-04
, 06:30
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Posts: 40 |
Thanked: 61 times |
Joined on Jan 2011
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#2
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The Following 3 Users Say Thank You to Keferen For This Useful Post: | ||
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2011-12-04
, 06:30
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Posts: 40 |
Thanked: 61 times |
Joined on Jan 2011
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#3
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The Following 29 Users Say Thank You to Keferen For This Useful Post: | ||
afaq, aironeous, bocephus, chase15, cortek, ejasmudar, hotnikkelz, Hurrian, isorn, jakiman, JohnHughes, Jordi, Joseph9560, kcfischer, kureyon, Manatus, Mara, nkirk, NokiaRocks, pplo, scapegoat845, ste-phan, StefanL, strange1712, SubCore, teethgrinder, trbs, udaychaitanya16, vdx29 |
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2011-12-04
, 06:55
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Posts: 664 |
Thanked: 160 times |
Joined on Jul 2008
@ Australia
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#4
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The Following 4 Users Say Thank You to jaeezzy For This Useful Post: | ||
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2011-12-04
, 07:11
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Posts: 4,365 |
Thanked: 2,467 times |
Joined on Jan 2010
@ Australia Mate
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#5
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2011-12-04
, 07:39
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Posts: 40 |
Thanked: 61 times |
Joined on Jan 2011
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#7
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The Following 3 Users Say Thank You to Keferen For This Useful Post: | ||
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2011-12-04
, 08:48
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Posts: 648 |
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Joined on Oct 2011
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#8
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The Following 13 Users Say Thank You to SamGan For This Useful Post: | ||
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2011-12-04
, 10:13
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Posts: 40 |
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Joined on Dec 2011
@ The Netherlands
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#9
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2011-12-04
, 10:36
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Posts: 1,789 |
Thanked: 1,699 times |
Joined on Mar 2010
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#10
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firstly, while it may look it, i mean no offence to all the peoples hard work that went into the n9/meego. the n9 itself is a solid piece of hardware and the software joint effort is an amazing feat. props.
i am taking a huge leap here writing this as it will no doubt get a lot of backs up. n9 and meego are great yes, but not as great as everyone is saying. here is my personal opinion on the 'final' product you wil be buying.
the short story. lets start with a meme
OH I SEE WHAT YOU DID THERE
meego took every intuitive feature from maemo5/n900 and decided to go completely against that and choose to go with all the worst features that everyone hates in the iphone and android. awesome. this IS meego on the n9.
if intel is indeed dropping it for tizen, meego needs to fork immediately and run with it on a community level.
i bought a n9 64gb black. there are hundreds of simple changes i could define to make meego far more intuitive, which i can document in great detail, if pr1.2 doesnt have a lot of these fixes i want in on the QA/UI developement direction. SIGN ME UP. i can see the power of meego, and it can be awesome, its just not at the moment. if i could put meego as it is on an android phone with a keyboard i would do it in a second. that simple. if i could put maemo5 on the n9, i would do that in a second too. a personal feeling i still find a bit confusing myself. n9 needs a keyboard, but the maemo5 needs the n9. a keyboard makes a load of difference.
the long story, part one of a five part trilogy...
being that i had a motorola flip phone for *years* that didnt have a camera or net, but could call and text and had a comprehensive contact list feature, moving from this phone was a matter of time and technology to catch up. i used a phone as a phone and a computer as a computer. around 2008/2009 i started looking at smart phones in a new light. my options then were an iphone, an android maybe the motorola droid, something sony or a nokia. after lots of research i went with the only logical choice. the nokia n900.
a few months after getting it out pops samsung, motorola and htc with some killer android phones, but the software was still extremely weak and has never really gotten any better. why do you need a dualcore 1.5ghz cpu for a mobile OS?
i am in an interesting position where i get to play with almost every new mobile that comes on the market locally. handy. so i get to compare my n900 with everything that comes out.
things n900 does very well
multitasking!!! and still years ahead at the time of writing this!
superb ui experience and logical intuitiveness
web browsing. everything works perfectly like a desktop. like a boss!
contact list, messaging and service integration (im, skype, facebook...)
media playback with stereo speakers.
loads of storage out of the box.
anything and everything to do with ip networks and telnet connections.
powerful niche apps like any desktop
customising everything right down to the os. anything is possible, mostly.
a kickstand and my personal favorite... the sentinel known as the r2d2 light
things n900 does not do so well
gps is a bit of a mess... and no magnetometer. non essential feature
front camera. terrible res, raw unprocessed image. rough. rarely use skype video calling when out and about, unless its *really* important.
cpu speed, although this can be clocked fairly safely.
os ram/swap space. sometimes swapping takes time and frags up a bit.
developement community is small, but dedicated and quality.
updates to core device. once nokia dropped it and focused on meego and dropped that too, future looks grim.
formfactor of a brick.
the n900 came with a lot of things missing, and while at release was average specs it dated very fast as mobile technology from htc, motorola and samsung leaped ahead. i was okay with that for many reasons and it has performed like a dream for over 2 years now. very stable and the niche apps i need have worked very very well. everything i need in a laptop in my pocket.
when i heard about the next incarnation from nokia.. the then unnamed meego device i have watched closely til release. every pic at the time showed the n950 with keyboard and all the nice specs, and of course the n9, the more consumer version. during this time i had use of the highly rated (bought it too but not for myself) htc desire (bravo) and a htc desire z (tmobile g1?). the desire i found to be a superb quality device. amazing screen and all that. once rooted and android mod put on it was even better. low internal ram makes androids not fun, and back then android couldnt put apps onto the sd card. that feature came much later. i was really impressed with the desire z with the full keyboard. now this is quite a dreamy device in itself. same issues as the desire though. if i didnt have an n900 i would have this. but the n950 was coming out sometime so i waited.
to my dismay when i heard that the n950 would be semi crippled and not be available commercially and only focusing on the n9, i was feeling a bit disappointed like being wounded by friendly fire. also was not too impressed by what i saw meego developing as. i wrote a letter to nokia finland which they responded to within a few days. impressed to even get a response letalone in that turn around time. in short the main point of the n9 they said was to have no actual controls on it and fully driven from the screen. logical i guess, but my n900 is like that already and has a handy keyboard too, as i suspect the n950 felt like. odd marketing suicide pill being that they had already announced meego developement by nokia would cease and this would be the only device... considering the interest in the n9 worldwide seemed to be off the charts. i took all this as 'less moving parts, less repairs'. no sdcard slot wear n tear. no faulty keyboards. no internal tinkering or dust traps. only things that can go wrong are the volume/power puttons, simcard slot which you wont be messing with much and the usb slot. i guess the little cover can get torn off easily. i am sure they bet on tried n true design. a hardware or screen fault would show up quick or never. oddly they didnt make any other part of the externals sealed like the motorola defy. not even a little.
so i waited for the release, watched a hundred videos online, read reviews and user experience and recently got a n9 64gb black. this is premiumly priced for a niche 'unsupported' device, more than an iphone 4s 16gb, more than a samsung galaxy s2, and far more than the old htc desire z. all great options on the market.
so when it arrived in the mail (although they do sell it locally, only the 16gb version available for a *very* high price, higher than what i paid for the 64gb imported) i quickly opened it to find it was almost fully charged. lots of getting to know it time.
first impressions.
tiny box for such a costly powerful device.
very black and shiney, nice to hold.
great looking black screen, good curve.
simple design, i could imagine it with a keyboard.
powering it on was another story...
what a drab POST. a semi shined nokia logo and a echo ripple. they could have done *anything* with this. looks like they spent more time on the advertising and webpage graphics. the n900 had a nice wide nokia logo, some moving dots, a pretty nokia handshake movie that always made me smile and some nice sounds as the desktop became visible. great gfx and feel instantly of a polished product. the n9 was another story. a chime, a badly lit back drop nokia logo and then after a bit more of a wait, a circular edged square throbber indicating more initialising. a quick demo of how to get to grips with it much like the n900 had.
finally, a screen full of colourful icons. very sharp screen.. odd colour of blue/green if you dont look at it directly. very bright for medium brightness. the icons look like they are not on the screen, almost a feel of 3d about them. terrible shape to the icons and while simple in design, easily understood by anyone. pretty generic stuff but done in a very low quality kind of way considering the offerings from android and apple in the icons department. not sure what the aim was here. lack lustre but effective.
jumped onto wifi and figured out quickly how to get the 1.1 update down. took an age to install. booted fine afterwards.
so, now it was ready to be tested. i opened many apps and started to get to grips with this swiping. pretty easy, even the lock screen double tap (lol zombie land) became natural. so icon/app screen (exactly as seen in iphone), an activity/update screen and the open apps multitasking screen (ala n900 when app is minimised). the top of the screen where the clock and battery are tap to get a similar menu to n900, very thin and small text, but sharp and readable. hopefully this menu can be enhanced like n900. and there is a swipe up from the bottom to get 4 quick apps menu. ripped directly from android (iphone 4 has it too) but can only be activated in certain situations.
so.. being of the mentality i love to see under the hood, i hit the settings. it all seems fairly limited options wise. lots of menus with few options within. control here felt a bit strange/alien compared with the n900. no screens have shrink or close icons, feels very android-ish. i say android for its minimalistic menu style. iphone does this same style better in every way. some screens have a back arrow at the bottom. some do not. some have save and cancel icons at the top. some actions have spawned new tasks without you knowing and its hard to know unless you swipe to the multitasking screen. it feels very clumsy in places just navigating the settings. it all feels empty and you are missing a *lot* of controls compared to the n900 and android. some things feel like they should be merged or displayed better elsewhere. some are just pointless. the only positive i have to say here is the 'about product' screen is very well rounded and is how everything else should have looked and felt. some items have an (i) beside the option. clicking takes you to an information screen. this is a terribly formatted html notepad description of the option and only viewable in portrait, i am sure it would look a lot better in landscape as a lot more of the os would. oddly the information given seems to make no sense and feels unmistakingly windows xp helpish. not an entirely useful explanation. had a nice back arrow at the bottom with a iphone style theme to it. oddly, the user guide in the apps menu that looks exactly like the settings information help, but it can rotate portrait and landscape... what gives here ?
verdict : phone settings feels like i am in basic mode. no intermediate or advanced settings at all. help is not consistant with the user guide app...