I do agree with what you said, and I have eee for sometime now
the only problem I have is this tiny winy screen, which has it's own reason.
I wonder if any of you tried any portable that has e-ink display
Samer
On Fri, Mar 6, 2009 at 1:05 AM, wrote:
> On Thu, Mar 05, 2009 at 03:56:58PM -0800,
On Thu, Mar 05, 2009 at 03:56:58PM -0800, lakestevensdental wrote:
> Having used an ASUS eee PC for several months, I'm growing to like the
> netbook format more and more, especially after installing XP so it
> interfaces with all my business and other stuff.
Interesting. I'm planning to get
Samer Azmy wrote:
> Interesting point of view but I wanted to add something regarding the
> Nokia N770,N8xx
>
> that they enjoy the Openness which means even if there is an Itouch
> application tht you cant find on the Nokia , you simply can program it
>
> I see Nokia tablet is more open ended d
Interesting point of view but I wanted to add something regarding the Nokia
N770,N8xx
that they enjoy the Openness which means even if there is an Itouch
application tht you cant find on the Nokia , you simply can program it
I see Nokia tablet is more open ended devices.
for the Netbooks, I see
After using a variety of small internet communication/computing devices,
(n800, n810, netbook-eee PC on Xandros, Ubuntu and now XP, plus and Ipod
Touch), I've come to some conclusions that might be worth sharing.
1. None of these devices is a truly one size fits all solution for small
computin
Ognen Duzlevski wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I am curious to find out what people use their Nokias for. If anyone
> could share their usage patterns, it would be appreciated.
>
I've both an n800 and n810.
* Initially, I bought the n800 for use as an internet phone while
traveling. Still use
On Thursday 05 March 2009 13:37:35 Fernando Cassia wrote:
> On Wed, Mar 4, 2009 at 11:12 AM, Ognen Duzlevski
wrote:
> > Hello,
> >
> > I am curious to find out what people use their Nokias for. If anyone
> > could share their usage patterns, it would be appreciated.
>
> This is like asking "what
On Thu, Mar 5, 2009 at 11:47 AM, Fernando Cassia wrote:
> On Thu, Mar 5, 2009 at 3:44 PM, Mark wrote:
>> And then, you may be able to sell that bike, but for only a tiny
>> fraction of what you paid for it, which means any way you look at it
>> you were ripped off. Telling somebody to "just sell"
On Thu, Mar 5, 2009 at 11:40 AM, Ryan Abel wrote:
>
> On Mar 5, 2009, at 1:38 PM, Mark wrote:
>
>> On Thu, Mar 5, 2009 at 11:24 AM, Marius Gedminas wrote:
>>
>>> Overall, the current generations of NITs are far from perfect, but they
>>> are the best hacker's devices of their size I've ever seen.
On Thu, Mar 5, 2009 at 3:44 PM, Mark wrote:
> And then, you may be able to sell that bike, but for only a tiny
> fraction of what you paid for it, which means any way you look at it
> you were ripped off. Telling somebody to "just sell" something that
> they paid hard-earned cash for and will have
On Thu, Mar 5, 2009 at 11:37 AM, Fernando Cassia wrote:
> On Wed, Mar 4, 2009 at 11:12 AM, Ognen Duzlevski
> wrote:
>> Hello,
>>
>> I am curious to find out what people use their Nokias for. If anyone
>> could share their usage patterns, it would be appreciated.
>
> This is like asking "what do
On Mar 5, 2009, at 1:38 PM, Mark wrote:
> On Thu, Mar 5, 2009 at 11:24 AM, Marius Gedminas
> wrote:
>
>> Overall, the current generations of NITs are far from perfect, but
>> they
>> are the best hacker's devices of their size I've ever seen.
>>
>> Marius Gedminas
>>
>
> And *that* is the su
On Thu, Mar 5, 2009 at 11:24 AM, Marius Gedminas wrote:
> Overall, the current generations of NITs are far from perfect, but they
> are the best hacker's devices of their size I've ever seen.
>
> Marius Gedminas
>
And *that* is the summary of the state of the tablets: they're *great*
for hackers,
On Wed, Mar 4, 2009 at 11:12 AM, Ognen Duzlevski wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I am curious to find out what people use their Nokias for. If anyone
> could share their usage patterns, it would be appreciated.
This is like asking "what do peope use their bikes for? I bought one
and can't find any use for it
On Wed, Mar 04, 2009 at 09:12:49AM -0500, Ognen Duzlevski wrote:
> I am curious to find out what people use their Nokias for. If anyone
> could share their usage patterns, it would be appreciated.
Oh dear, this looks like a large thread, and I don't have the time to
read it all... Do you plan to
Julius,
I have been meaning to look into rsync and based on your input I will do
so to see if that solves the problem I had with file transfer back to
my laptop, which runs Windows Server 2000 in dual boot mode (the flip
side of the dual boot config is RHEL).
Although the laptop os a ~10 year
On Wed, Mar 04, 2009 at 09:12:49AM -0500, Ognen Duzlevski wrote:
> I am curious to find out what people use their Nokias for. If anyone
> could share their usage patterns, it would be appreciated.
I've got an N810 and here are my comments:
* The web browser is my #1 app, without any doubt. I
On Thu, Mar 5, 2009 at 8:28 AM, Julius Szelagiewicz wrote:
> I've noticed that all the use discussed appears to be personal. I have
> deployed about 50 N810 tablets in a work environment to be used by my
> company's drivers to get customer signatures for proof of delivery. The
> performance is sol
Aniello Del Sorbo wrote:
> This is not the N810 fault.
>
I had the N800 first. But I bought the other two devices over time,
because the N800 wasn't capable of doing what I needed it to - play back
music without screwing up the gaps between tracks as Canola does, Surf
the web without struggl
On Thu, Mar 5, 2009 at 8:39 AM, Aniello Del Sorbo wrote:
> 2009/3/5 Matt Emson :
>> Ognen Duzlevski wrote:
>>> Hello,
>>>
>>> I am curious to find out what people use their Nokias for. If anyone
>>> could share their usage patterns, it would be appreciated.
>> Six months ago, I would have given yo
On Thu, Mar 5, 2009 at 1:17 AM, Andrew Daviel wrote:
>> If Maemo Mapper would use the *vector* OSM data
>
> Navit. Well, that reads Garmin vector data. Yes, it would be nice if
> Maemo Mapper folded in the Navit code.
>
I've used Navit, but gave up after the last update broke it to the
point that
2009/3/5 Matt Emson :
> Ognen Duzlevski wrote:
>> Hello,
>>
>> I am curious to find out what people use their Nokias for. If anyone
>> could share their usage patterns, it would be appreciated.
> Six months ago, I would have given you a long list. Now, nothing. It
> sits about doing nothing. I grab
I've noticed that all the use discussed appears to be personal. I have
deployed about 50 N810 tablets in a work environment to be used by my
company's drivers to get customer signatures for proof of delivery. The
performance is solid, the application was reasonably easy to write and
even very non-t
John,
for file transfer nothing beats rsync. It works like a charm on
just about any platform, N8x0 included.
julius
On Thu, 5 Mar 2009, John Holmblad wrote:
> Ognen,
>
> thanks for sharing your perspective.
>
> After several years I found an N800 app that provides real, practical,
> week
Ognen,
thanks for sharing your perspective.
After several years I found an N800 app that provides real, practical,
weekly value to me . It is the multilist application. In fact, I even
considered selling N800's with this application preinstalled for end users.
I have tested Skype and it works
Matt Emson wrote:
> Ognen Duzlevski wrote:
>> Hello,
>>
>> I am curious to find out what people use their Nokias for. If anyone
>> could share their usage patterns, it would be appreciated.
> Six months ago, I would have given you a long list. Now, nothing. It
> sits about doing nothing. I grab i
Ognen Duzlevski wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I am curious to find out what people use their Nokias for. If anyone
> could share their usage patterns, it would be appreciated.
Six months ago, I would have given you a long list. Now, nothing. It
sits about doing nothing. I grab it to take meeting notes arou
On Thu, Mar 05, 2009 at 02:09:35PM +, Tony Green wrote:
>
> > I am curious to find out what people use their Nokias for. If anyone
> > could share their usage patterns, it would be appreciated.
>
> As an E-book reader it's excellent. Means I have hundreds of books with me
> wherever I go a
> I am curious to find out what people use their Nokias for. If anyone
> could share their usage patterns, it would be appreciated.
For me it would never replace my desktop computer, but being a handy pocketable
Linux computer means it's possible to run some applications when I'm out and
abou
I used mine for the following:
- Remote to home PC from work via VNC
- Pidgin for always on instant messaging (facebook/yahoo/msn)
- Skype for calling other users & international calls
- GPE Calendar (syncing to Google Cal) & GPE Todo
I find that using these with keyboard is so much easie
The n810 (and linux) is quite new to me. My favorite handheld, as a
computing road warrior, has (for 20 years!) been the HP200LX
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HP_200Lx
1) The 200LX is a MS-DOS pc and has some excellent PIMs and a perfect
data base built in. These apps exist as a PC suite called C
Hi,
ext Gary wrote:
>> My N800 boots from a 16Gb SD card and I have plenty of space.
>
> Have you increased your swap size yet?
> Settings -> Control Panel -> Memory -> Virtual
Swap (file on memory card) is OK for temporary use e.g. to be able
to use some www-site, but I wouldn't enable it perma
On Wed, 4 Mar 2009, Ognen Duzlevski wrote:
> I am curious to find out what people use their Nokias for. If anyone
> could share their usage patterns, it would be appreciated.
(N810, non-WiMax)
I use maemo mapper not infrequently. Mostly Google maps, preload the
maps from WiFi. Save a GPX file fro
33 matches
Mail list logo