This is called the hype effect. All new products get raved about. Wait for actual reviews
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This is called the hype effect. All new products get raved about. Wait for actual reviews
This is called the hype effect. All new products get raved about. Wait for actual reviews
Love at first sight -- this is possibly the most beautiful phone ever made. It's not our first hardware love affair (we're looking at you, iPhone 4S), nor likely our last, but the N9 is in a class of its own in terms of design. You've never seen anything like it, and if you think it's attractive in pictures, wait until you see it in person -- it's completely and utterly irresistible.
Oops, so specs dont count?
In general day-to-day use, no - UI responsiveness and common tasks are super quick on WP7's lower spec CPU. You have to go to CPU-intensive tasks like the browser to see the difference, and it'd obvious that the more powerful CPU would win there.
Once loaded, there's nothing to choose between the devices in terms of navigation, etc - with the WP7 device leveraging hardware acceleration, etc.
At some point you have to make a decision - do you want to have your phone's battery last for 24+ hours and take 4 seconds to load a complex webpage, or have it last 8 hours and take 2 seconds to load that webpage. Horses for courses. I can leave all functions on my WP7 (wifi, gps, bluetooth) and get 24+ hours of normal usage with EASE. The iPhone 4(s) sits up at night dreaming about that kind of battery life. But it doesn't dream for too long, because the battery then dies.
if they dont try and kill it off in courts with patents.
Aah so you say that real life things like Browsing, media playback and games dont count as long as the phone can have more battery life
Anyway, as odd as it my sound I am actually glad there is another phone on the market, it just helps push innovation... well that is if they dont try and kill it off in courts with patents.
This is what I expect MS will do if they get any significant market share
This is what I expect MS will do if they get any significant market share
Dude, it's not 1990 anymore. MS are the only ones playing the patent game right. Apple and Google are the a-holes in this space right now.
Dude, it's not 1990 anymore. MS are the only ones playing the patent game right. Apple and Google are the a-holes in this space right now.
Nope, Apple is the one trying to kill it, Mafiasoft is to busy making money off it to try and kill it, its a win-win situation for them, they add a price to free and if they lose market share they still win.
To be honest they all stuffing up the software world. If you dont believe my just try and sell software in the US. The company I work for in NZ was doing fine until we started making a name in USA... we already have a patent case against us and we been in the US for just 1 year and this by a company that doesn't "exist".
Not so sure that's true.
In 2002/03 Steve Ballmer, CEO of Microsoft, declared that Microsoft's new standard DotNet was protected by patents and free implementations would not be allowed[/B].
]In late 2002, Microsoft began dissuade corproporate customers from introducing GNU/Linux by pointing out that if they use free software nobody would protect them from being sued for patent infringement."
Also I will give you apple being the a-hole but please elaborate as to how google is???? As far as I know they don't patent any of their android work {I could be wrong about this}.
The problem is Google's attitude towards patents ... they quite happily maintain and publish software which obviously infringes on patents, but don't do anything to indemnify their clients, as you can see today with Android. WebM was the same. They say "hey, here's some free stuff, if someone sues you, you're on your own". But it's all fine, because that free software they're pushing out works amazingly well as an advertising channel for them. So they make money that way. They're a-holes to their clients. The right way is how MS does it - pay $8 (or whatever it is) for a WP7 license, and they guarantee nobody will sue, as they'll take on that responsibility.
Yeah, I meant the 90's. Didn't realise someone would take me so literally
Eh? But there is one? Mono?
Let's be quite honest, they're 100% right here. It's happening today, they just called it right 10 years ago. Ironically, if you're a corporate MS client, they indemnify you against getting sued for your Linux usage. They know how to play the game!
The problem is Google's attitude towards patents ... they quite happily maintain and publish software which obviously infringes on patents, but don't do anything to indemnify their clients, as you can see today with Android. WebM was the same. They say "hey, here's some free stuff, if someone sues you, you're on your own". But it's all fine, because that free software they're pushing out works amazingly well as an advertising channel for them. So they make money that way. They're a-holes to their clients. The right way is how MS does it - pay $8 (or whatever it is) for a WP7 license, and they guarantee nobody will sue, as they'll take on that responsibility.
Things might change with their Motorola Aquisition - they now have a giant patent portfolio, and it's just a matter of time before we see if they go the Microsoft route of licensing, or the Apple route of trying to stop people selling devices in certain countries.
The bottom line is, the patent system was made so that companies could get their small cut if someone used their idea. Patent trolls that don't use the tech and try and sue for billions, or companies like Apple that try and block sales with patents are the guys that have broken the system. It's them who is the problem. I have no problem for companies collecting license fees for tech they've invented and actively develop and use.
This kind of thing is ecspecially sickening Link: http://www.dailytech.com/Master+of+...petoUnlock+Despite+Prior+Art/article23116.htm
Yeah, they let stupid patents through all the time. Apple will never be able to actually enforce the patent. It's just a worthless piece of paper. But some lawyer at Apple thought it'd be a good idea to do.