Posts Tagged ‘ Symbian

Next Nokia Communicator?

I still use my Nokia E90 from time to time, and still rate it highly for its big screen and big keyboard. Still the only mobile phone I’ve used that can display most web pages without requiring scrolling left or right or zooming. And yes Symbian is stodgy now, but it works well, especially with the navigational controls of the E90. Pity the phone   is heavier than a black hole. Try carry it in your trouser pocket and you will quickly need suspenders for the trousers and need to sit down regularly.

Before the E90 I had a 9300i which was actually the perfect size. Don’t have mine anymore but still see people using it from time to time. It was originally released in 2005. Still available on the internet. Ca-cell (www.cacell.co.za) will sell you one for R4800 lol. Bet you they are not selling many at that price.

So when is Nokia bringing out the next in the Communicator series. I will buy one. Hell, I’d buy two. The Nokia E97 has the right letter and numbers in its name, but is it a Communicator. Check out the pictures below.

Way cool what? A concept only at this stage :(

Finding Maemo

Symbian is toast, at least for Nokia’s future top of the range devices. Maemo is the new Symbian. First used in Nokia’s internet tablet in 2005, the brand new N900 runs the latest Maemo incarnation. Looks very sleek, and with Mozilla as its web browsing technology, should be yum. Like just about every other new mobile OS, e.g. Palm WebOS, iPhone OS, etc, Maemo is also based on Linux. The latter may not have succeeded in dislodging Microsoft Windows from its pc throne, but it is a clear winner in the mobile world.

Ditching Symbian on its high-end phones is probably a good move on Nokia’s part. Symbian is solid, but old, and still can’t probably handle rich text format HTML emails. It also falls short in many other areas such as web browsing and on-line video. The latest Symbian adaption for Nokia touchscreen phones like the N97 and Express Music falls way short of the competition in terms of its user interface. Anyone that has used either of these phones will know about the confusing way in which you have to double-press in some places and single-press in others.

The best feature of the N900 is arguably its 3.5 inch 16 million colours touchscreen. But why another resistive touchscreen Nokia? It is time for a multi-touch capacitive screen. Everyone else has one, even Winmobile! I can understand that the Fins don’t want to take their gloves off, but it is warm where I am. No gloves here.

In response to a friend’s comment that my blog seems oddly devoid of iPhone posts, I offer the following bit of news.

WinMo could always do this. Android could do it from the start. Palm WebOS can do it. Symbian has already forgotten that it can also do it. Until now the iPhone couldn’t. What am I talking about?

It is multi-tasking. You know, that thing that women can do and men can’t. Never mind that I am typing this while talking to my 2 year old, and trying to wake my 12 year old for school. And trying not to listen to cbeebies blaring in the background.

Now your jailbroken iPhone can do it, or rather can do more than one it at a time. Thanks to a 3rd party application called multifl0w. Check out the video demo below. Will cost you around US$5. Doubt that my friend’s iPhone is jailbroken. He is very law-abiding.

The smartphone cake then and now

The movers and shakers in 2005:

And in 2009…..

The following from Business Insider’s Chart of the Day:
Apple’s iPhone 3GS is driving its market share higher and higher, according to a new study from ChangeWave Research. The firm surveyed 4,255 consumers in September, and found 39% of them now have a smartphone, which is up from 37% from July and almost double from a year ago. As more people buy smartphones, the iPhone 3GS is taking share, while Research In Motion is stalling. And yes, it looks ugly for Palm, but at least it has leveled off. Too bad it looks like Google’s Android is about to eat it alive.
 

Search engine optimization by SEO Design Solutions