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Topic Review (Newest First)
21-02-2008 11:04 PM
ahmedstp thanku for your concern
11-02-2008 03:15 PM
Unregistered
Linux in your pocket

@Gary,

I'm a linux sysadmin, and I use my N810 for exactly that. It has xterm built in, and from that you can apt-get install ssh for example. The slide out keyboard even has a ctrl key.

There aren't as many standard linux apps ported over yet as I'd like, but many are in the process. Finding out what is available is a little bit of a slog, as you have to search a number of repositories, and some are N800 compatible only (again, so far). But I love my Linux-in-a pocket.

I also second the bluetooth-to-smartphone use as being one fully featured device in two parts.

S
04-02-2008 09:29 AM
Richard Ross Gary - yes you can get a command line. I'm not a techie at all so won't go into detail but there's a website called internettablettalk.com that does and PenguinBaiter has hack to port KDE (+KOffice) to the device. There are some hidden/protected/secure bits of Maemo, I understand.


Krisse - thanks for these articles, really interesting and helpful if (like me) you are thinking of buying one of these. I'm going to go for the n810 because I just can't live with the size of the E90 for a day-to-day phone.

It strikes me that buyers might be better off thinking of the n810 as a mini-computer rather than a personal media player or extension of their phone. There are easier to use and smaller dedicated PMPs and phones that do the integration already on Symbian, OSX and WinMob platforms - although integration brings compromise and it's a personal choice how much of that you can live with.

It seems to me that the real value of the n810 lies in its flexibility but that that flexibility requires a commitment from the user to get the most out of it (i.e. a desire to find your way around the Linux communities).
04-02-2008 04:39 AM
Gary Parker
Does the N810 provide a command line?

I was wondering if the N810 provides a command line (bash or something else)?
Basically how much direct access will one have to the host OS itself? users, services, shells,files,utilities, scripting??

I am a tech guy operating in a primarily Linux based environment.
Right now I have got everything I need to connect and work with my servers from anywhere, installed on my E90 (Putty, Midpssh, SIC!FTP, Mocha Telnet, Vnc Viewer....).
But carrying around a personal copy of Linux in a pocket sized device would be a truly novel and satisfying experience.

To be honest, I haven't done any reading up on Maemo yet (where these questions would probably answered), but if anyone could confirm these, I would really appreciate it.
02-02-2008 11:52 PM
krisse
Quote:
However, major upgrades are needed in N8xx series eg. camera & video recording before it can be called a true portable multimedia device.
If you do use a tablet on the move then you have to have a phone with it for the internet connection, so the phone can also handle all the camerawork. Even lower-end phones nowadays come with a surprisingly good camera, for example the 5300 has a 1.3mp and costs about 140 euros sim-free.

If you set the phone and tablet as trusted Bluetooth devices, you can access all of the phone's files (including photos and videos) just as if they were present on the tablet. The phone actually appears as a drive in the tablet's file manager. As soon as you take a picture on your phone's camera, you can access that picture on your tablet.

In effect, a paired tablet and phone are the same device, they just happen to be in two physical pieces.

I totally agree the N810's camera is no competition at all for a phone's camera, and said so in the article with pretty strong language.

But if you use the N810 in combination with a phone or smartphone, the tablet is actually darn good at handling multimedia, partly because photos and videos look extremely good on the N810's huge sharp screen (the E90 is almost as huge but most will use smaller phones). Also, the N810's excellent browser makes it very easy to get those photos and videos onto the web without having to use any unfamiliar apps or interfaces. The process is exactly the same as uploading from your PC.


Quote:
Like you pointed out. E90 is a multimedia player, qwerty pda, gps, camcorder, camera, and smartphone(!) with a superb screen (4"), one of the biggest and best compared to iphone 3.5" & N95 8Gb 2.8". And all in one.
I believe the cost of the devices it replaces makes up for the price.
If you want all or most of those in one package, then yes the E90 is definitely the one to go for, and the large screen means you get a lot more value out of features like videos, photos and the web than you do with normal-sized smartphones. I also rate the E90's GPS much more highly than the N810's, it's far far quicker to lock on and Nokia Maps provides more free services including route-planning.

Another great thing about the the E90 is that it does an excellent job of combining a one-handed smartphone on the outside with a large-screen smartphone on the inside. No one could possibly complain it's cumbersome to do texts on an E90 as they often do for other large-screen devices.

However, if your main priority is access to internet services, the N810 does do this much better than any phone or PDA. If you are okay with carrying two devices and you want the best pocket-sized web browser, then you'd probably be best off with a tablet and phone.

Neither device is better than the other because their usefulness depends entirely on what your particular priorities are. I know many people who would reject both because their priority is having as small a device as possible, so they'd probably prefer an E51 or 6120.


Quote:
Btw. The story is very informative. And the comparisions well done.
Thanks! :-)

I just want to emphasise these articles aren't really about E90 vs N810. Devices are meant to be useful, and the wrong device is the one that doesn't fit your own needs.

These articles are meant to be a comparison of how one company can produce two very different devices with very different strengths and weaknesses.
02-02-2008 08:58 PM
bills2north
One phone to rule.. all them apps.

Once again I must push for E90.
Youīre absolutely right about E90īs target group being business (but donīt forget phone geeks too ;-)

However, major upgrades are needed in N8xx series eg. camera & video recording before it can be called a true portable multimedia device. The other attributes are already on the market in other devices.

Like you pointed out. E90 is a multimedia player, qwerty pda, gps, camcorder, camera, and smartphone(!) with a superb screen (4"), one of the biggest and best compared to iphone 3.5" & N95 8Gb 2.8". And all in one.
I believe the cost of the devices it replaces makes up for the price.

And as you and someone also said, buying 2 devices or E90 on contract makes both alternatives cheaper. Although having said that.. N800īs under 200€ price tag here at the Northpole is a great deal. When N810īs price comes down itīll be worth dragging around with my brick... maybe. Well actually that would be wasteful.

If you donīt have an E90 then N810īs worth exploring. Or if youīre very well off and have pockets to spare ;-)

Btw. The story is very informative. And the comparisions well done.
Thanks!
02-02-2008 01:30 AM
tomsky
Quote:
When mobile phones first began people complained about the huge gaps in the networks which seemed to be based around cities and towns, but it's now becoming increasingly difficult to find gaps even in the countryside.
I think it's interesting that you make that point, because that was really the limiting factor in the uptake of mobile phones for casual use (and still is the barrier for uptake in the USA!). The similar problem - lack of mobile internet - is what is holding devices like the N810 back. Microsoft and Amazon both back a similar form factor with UMPCs and the Kindle, respectively.

I think (and hope!) that we'll see these sorts of "internet appliance" start to break into the mainstream. Big screens, responsive interfaces and long battery life have only really become possible in such small devices recently, and I think that it is a new form factor that deserves success, if only because it could be really useful to so many people.
01-02-2008 10:59 PM
krisse
Quote:
The syncing issue is really the clincher for me at the moment. Always connected devices, although the data is always up-to-date, have very short lives. Google want us to all be connected like this, and you can see this in their Gmail app (it gets its data from the server, and never stores anything locally), but sometimes we're going to be out of contact, and need some data stored locally.
Quote:
Don't get me wrong, I like google's idea of keeping everything stored on the internet and easily sharable (although they could use a lesson in privacy) but at the same time, we don't all have flat-rate data plans and ubiquitous 3.5G connections.
I totally agree it's impractical for many people at the moment, you can't always get a signal and if you do it may be very expensive to access, but in the future things may be different. All wireless networks now provide much wider, faster and cheaper coverage than they used to, and that trend will probably continue.

When mobile phones first began people complained about the huge gaps in the networks which seemed to be based around cities and towns, but it's now becoming increasingly difficult to find gaps even in the countryside.

Here in Finland you can row out into the middle of a lake in the middle of nowhere, and you can surf the internet through a mobile phone connection that costs less per month than home broadband. That kind of connectivity was unimaginable 10 or 20 years ago, and in another 10 or 20 years the world may be unbelievably connected. (Even uninhabited deserts already have some kind of connection through satellite phones.)

It's not just Google talking this way either, the idea of online apps pre-dates their existence and first came up when Java appeared. People thought that they'd be able to do all their apps through Java on websites, and Microsoft started getting terrified that the operating systems of computers would become irrelevant. That never happened because Java in the 1990s was cumbersome and slow, it was never a serious rival to native applications.

Now though, web apps are a lot more slick and reliable. I'm not saying they are better than PC software, just that for many people they may be good enough.
01-02-2008 10:05 PM
tomsky
Quote:
Why dont you consider a smartphone in addition to your E90?
Just E51 for example.
But my E90 is so big and shiny!

Quote:
Smartphones such as the 6120 or E51 are so small and cheap (about 200 to 300 euros sim-free) that it's perfectly plausible to buy the N810 and a 6120/E51 instead of an E90, because the total cost would be the same in either case.
No, I use an N73 as my "pub phone", so I'm already in a weird kind of 1.5 box situation.

The syncing issue is really the clincher for me at the moment. Always connected devices, although the data is always up-to-date, have very short lives. Google want us to all be connected like this, and you can see this in their Gmail app (it gets its data from the server, and never stores anything locally), but sometimes we're going to be out of contact, and need some data stored locally. On the other hand, we need to keep our data backed up in case we lose a device, and this is where I really get wound up. Things never sync perfectly, and I'm forever deleting duplicate entries or re-defining my speed dials because something isn't quite right.

Don't get me wrong, I like google's idea of keeping everything stored on the internet and easily sharable (although they could use a lesson in privacy) but at the same time, we don't all have flat-rate data plans and ubiquitous 3.5G connections. I really like the idea of the sidekick and it's online storage idea, and I just wonder why Nokia never got in on this. It's a unique selling point, it's genuinely useful and it just works (now *there's* and idea!). Carphone warehouse even sell themselves on backing up your address book, because real, non-techy people often lose their phones and don't keep any other list of numbers. "Never lose your data" used to be a mantra, yet it's now completely possible, and would free smartphones from desktop computers.

I shall stop ranting about pet peeves now, and watch QI.
01-02-2008 09:30 PM
krisse
Quote:
next year.. Tablets like this will drop off the market quickly when next commies aquire touch screen input. It's gonna happen soon..
Even if you added touchscreens, the S60 interface and application ecosystem are completely different to Maemo. They are aimed at totally different audiences, with the tablets oriented around internet use while the communicators are oriented around business use. There's also the difference in price: the E90 launched for 900 euros while the N810 launched for 400 euros.

If there is internal competition for the tablets it's going to come from ordinary S60 phones getting larger screens and touchscreens, but even then they'd look and feel very different.


Quote:
On the other hand, the N810 is no smartphone replacement when it comes to the PDA functions.
I agree on the native applications there isn't much PDA/PIM stuff for the tablet (at least not yet), and mentioned this as one of the drawbacks of the tablet.

However, the tablet's very good browser and touchscreen means you can use web-based calendars etc much more easily than on a smartphone, and the beauty of these is that they are the same calendar whether you access them on a mobile device or a PC. They don't require any syncing at all because they're the same data on the same server.

I'm not saying that's necessarily a viable replacement for PDA/PIM stuff right now, but it might well be in the future as more and more places get cheap fast internet access. That's possibly why Nokia is developing both app-centric smartphones and web-centric tablets, so it has both options covered whatever the future brings.


Quote:
Why dont you consider a smartphone in addition to your E90?
Just E51 for example.
Yes, really good point. This is the point that many people miss.

Smartphones such as the 6120 or E51 are so small and cheap (about 200 to 300 euros sim-free) that it's perfectly plausible to buy the N810 and a 6120/E51 instead of an E90, because the total cost would be the same in either case.

At least one phone network operator here in Finland does actually offer a phone and internet tablet package for precisely the above reason.
01-02-2008 09:28 PM
bills2north
next year..

next year.. Tablets like this will drop off the market quickly when next commies aquire touch screen input.

It's gonna happen soon..
01-02-2008 09:05 PM
Unregistered Why dont you consider a smartphone in addition to your E90?
Just E51 for example.
01-02-2008 08:58 PM
tomsky It's an interesting comparison - especially as it brings the whole 1 box/2 boxes debate back up again. With the E90, I sometimes wish I could break the phone away from the rest of the stuff, and have 2 boxes temporarily. This is especially important when you are on the phone and someone asks whether day x is free - you try to remember, but your phone is also your diary, and in use!

On the other hand, the N810 is no smartphone replacement when it comes to the PDA functions. Nokia really need to start looking at the device-to-device syncing problems they're creating when they start diverging devices - content copier doesn't cut it.

What would be really nice is if all of their phones etc. could network themselves locally and exchange calendar data or free time, and thus make appointment setting a pain free process. Or maybe I should just go back to a filofax and a dumb phone...

Tom
01-02-2008 06:57 PM
Unregistered Concerning the GPRS prices.
AFAIK, flatrate in Germany costs from 25 to 50 Euros/month depending on the operator.
T-com offers unlimited HSDPA/HSUPA option for 50 euros/month.
O2 does not have any HSDPA, but GPRS/UMTS is availible for 25 Euros/month only. 5Gb limitation per month. 0.5 Euro each additional Mb.
Where did you get your numbers?
01-02-2008 05:28 PM
krisse
Quote:
The camera on the E90 is slow and sluggish.
Compared to what?

This is a comparison of the N810 and E90, and the E90's camera is far better than the N810's in every way.


Quote:
The N810 does have an FM radio application. It is now in version 1.5.7. So there is no tuner?
You can install the application but nothing happens when you use it because there is no FM hardware for it to access.


Quote:
The N800 has excellent built-in speakers. The FM radio on the Nokia N800 comes programmed with local stations by name for every city.
Yes, I agree, the FM radio on the N800 is great, as are its speakers.


Quote:
1) faster CPU - dual core
If you put a faster CPU the battery life will be severely eroded, which ruins the point of having a pocket-sized device.

They only removed the speed cap on the N800 when OS 2008 came out because OS 2008 is much better at conserving power in other ways.


Quote:
3) A clitoral trackpoint or similar pointing device
Have to say, I've never heard the word "clitoral" used in quite that context.

If you mean a mini-joystick, I would be completely against it because the one on my E61 is literally painful to use.


Quote:
In Europe the cost is as much as 20 000 Euros per Gigabyte.
Are you the same person who claimed it was 10,000 euros per megabyte?

Even 20 euros per megabyte is pushing it, here in Finland the most you'd pay is 1 euro per megabyte, and 10 euros a month gets you unlimited access.

Quote:
And until the cost comes down to a low prepaid flat rate like 300 Euros per month for unlimited GPRS data
Erm... the cost is already way, way below that. Are you sure you mean Euros, or are you confusing it with another currency?


Quote:
7) Ability to update OS without a PC
I'd definitely appreciate this one, and in a way you can do this already as you can boot from a memory card.


Quote:
The built-in maps are far more useful than having to download maps on the fly like the E90.
You can actually download the maps to a PC and transfer them to the E90.


Quote:
Surfing the web on a handheld internet tablet should be as fast and efficient as surfing the web on a Macbook Air.
You're making the mistake of thinking that pocket-sized gadgets should do as much as laptops or desktop PCs.

Pocket-sized devices will never, EVER catch up with laptops or desktops because technology will always allow larger devices to do more.

The point of a tablet is not to compete with current laptops, the point is to compete with other pocket-sized devices, and to have a good battery life and a reasonable price tag.
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