dream
Member
Until all the 300,000 or so apps are updated for ICS, performance will be inconsistent because some apps will accept forced hardware acceleration happily while others will stutter and crash.LOL
Sounds like a great platform.
Until all the 300,000 or so apps are updated for ICS, performance will be inconsistent because some apps will accept forced hardware acceleration happily while others will stutter and crash.LOL
That, and the simple reality is that some people JUST CAN'T FUCKING PROGRAM.
Sounds like a great platform.
Any neat apps? I'm rather bored of my library of software so far.
I don't understand why the official Google Reader app and default browser app keep force closing on Android.
That speaks volumes of the quality of developer tools.
Sounds like a great platform.
Because iOS apps didn't have to be updated for new features like fast-app switching ... or Mango features for WP7 apps?
Granted this may involve a bit more work, but the principal is the same.
Oh it's relatively fast ... but it crashes ... basically all the time.And Raistlin, what do you mean by pile of shit? Its faster (loading web pages) than safari on the ipad2 and 4s (ICS on GB anyway). I'm not very knowledgeable of web standards so I can't speak of how accurate it is, but as far as frame rate is concerned, its all over the damn place. Sometimes 60fps sometimes 30fps. Sometimes if I rotate to landscape, the same page can go from butter smooth to choppy shit and vice versa.
Web browsing and word processing is pretty much all I do.
You may be completely disconnected with how a great many people use computers (ie Facebook, email, browser). Nothing laughable at all. In fact most people buy far far more powerful PCs than they ever utilize with their limited needed functionality.
I suppose I should have expected these responses. That's what I get for responding to an ambiguous statement with an even more ambiguous (and easy to construe as blanket) statement. Sorry for that. Let me detail where I'm coming from.Doesnt mean anything. Do you know what the vast majority of people actually use their computers for? Heres a hint, not much. Thats why a tablet PC will suffice as a primary computing device for so many people. Most people only use them for light stuff to begin with.
Don't get me wrong ... there's a reason I'm not using an Android phoneI guess I just think there's a huge difference between functionality and usability. If I pull out an old app compiled for iPhone OS 3.1.2 and it doesn't support multitasking, it's pretty inconvenient but it still runs with the same smoothness I'd expect of all iOS apps.
I also bought an Asus Transformer and it's probably the worst tech purchase I've made since I bought a Voodoo Rush card.
Any neat apps? I'm rather bored of my library of software so far.
DAMNNNNNNNNNNNNNN!!!! I'm not sure I'd go that far ... but yeah once the honeymoon was over, I wish I had the money in my pocket instead.
I still do use it though, especially at night in bed. Hopefully ICS will at least improve things a bit. Too bad that won't magically create a good library of tablet apps :\
Sure, if you want your tablet to have a battery life of 2 hours.
Google knows that Honeycomb was a mess and has even admitted as much. Why don't you wait until ICS is available on your tablets before you pass final judgment?
And why do you assume that? I expect Win8 ARM tablets to have relatively comparable battery life (or at least 2nd gen ones since all the SoC's will be running on a smaller fab process).Sure, if you want your tablet to have a battery life of 2 hours.
Who said I've passed final judgement? My above impressions where for Honeycomb (and the Transformer's keyboard) ... it states as much.Google knows that Honeycomb was a mess and has even admitted as much. Why don't you wait until ICS is available on your tablets before you pass final judgment?
And why do you assume that? I expect Win8 ARM tablets to have relatively comparable battery life.
Who said I've passed final judgement? My above impressions where for Honeycomb (and the Transformer's keyboard) ... it states as much.
That said, I haven't seen anything to make me expect a huge uptake in tablet apps dev for ICS. Really the only thing that will a light a fire under that - particularly for productivity apps - is if there's significant increases in sales (and I don't mean Kindle and Nook). So even if ICS or some future update improves performance and stability, I think I'm out of the market for largish Android tablets for a while. They make for nice smaller consumption devices though.
What happened to this thread?
blarg ... my apologies. I'll stop once this conversation ends.What happened to this thread?
Will it though? While some people my root these devices, I suspect the majority of people will be using the stock OS. That means the Nook and Kindle-specific stores. So who's to say most of the apps won't target their HW, form-factor, and features?If the kindle and nook move to ics and maintain full compatibility, it'll be a great boon for tablet support for android in general.
If they don't....fragment ahoy.
And why do you assume that? I expect Win8 ARM tablets to have relatively comparable battery life (or at least 2nd gen ones since all the SoC's will be running on a smaller fab process)
If the kindle and nook move to ics and maintain full compatibility, it'll be a great boon for tablet support for android in general.
If they don't....fragment ahoy.
Yeah. I think the more tightly regulated environment will mean more optimized performance even if it's actually doing more. Look at how WP7 performs on 'shit' hardware (oh yeah ... we're in the WP7 threadIt will be interesting to see the real world battery life figured but on the arm side I would think they would at very least match comparable android battery life figures (and with their more closed system in relation to 3rd party apps I would not be surprised if they end up beating android).
See my above post.Ars Technica had a very good article about Android 'fragmentation':
http://arstechnica.com/gadgets/news...-thing-as-android-only-android-compatible.ars
Android doesn't 'fragment' because Android isn't a single monolithic OS design, with a closed-source model which is enforced by a multibillion-dollar corporate entity. Google doesn't give a shit about Android 'fragmentation', because they don't make any money off selling the OS itself, but rather from Android Market and advertising. If we stop thinking of Android the same way we think about Windows, Mac OS/iOS, and other monolithic OSes, then we won't incorrectly think there is a problem. Because there isn't. Except for Verizon not getting NFL Mobile working on my Tuna, that's bullshit.
Will it though? While some people my root these devices, I suspect the majority of people will be using the stock OS. That means the Nook and Kindle-specific stores. So who's to say most of the apps won't target their HW, form-factor, and features?
Even if those apps scale well, you have to think about what these devices are targeted towards - consumption devices. Their popularity doesn't guarantee the breadth of SW many people were hoping for. If anything, it limits it.
I'm certainly not psychic, but I try to keep abreast of the big picture and how things are trending. Unless some things change, I'm starting to think Android is moving towards a somewhat limited, consumption-oriented niche. Basically more and more Kindle/Nook-like ... with iPad and obviously Win8 being more about bridging the gap between PC and phone. It's funny. I originally thought Android's open nature would make it better equipped for bridging such a gap. In hindsight, I think it actually ended up being the opposite. HW and the OS is so fractured, that performance oriented SW got lost in the shuffle. It seems the more controlled environment I used to argue against may actually prove to be the best way forward.
Ars Technica had a very good article about Android 'fragmentation':
http://arstechnica.com/gadgets/news...-thing-as-android-only-android-compatible.ars
Android doesn't 'fragment' because Android isn't a single monolithic OS design, with a closed-source model which is enforced by a multibillion-dollar corporate entity. Google doesn't give a shit about Android 'fragmentation', because they don't make any money off selling the OS itself, but rather from Android Market and advertising. If we stop thinking of Android the same way we think about Windows, Mac OS/iOS, and other monolithic OSes, then we won't incorrectly think there is a problem. Because there isn't. Except for Verizon not getting NFL Mobile working on my Tuna, that's bullshit.
At first I was like WTF are you talking then I saw the news. Microsoft is mad. 10,000 tokens only (and that's per device not individual—I've owned 3 different WPs already) and now they wont continue the program?! Fuck em.So was I, so I went hunting for some new/cool apps. Here's what I found:
Games:
-Ricochet-fun little pong-like game
-Bouncy Mouse-Just a good game
-Orb-was free for a bit, another fun game
-Mafia Pizza Car-surprisingly fun little top down driving game
Apps:
-AppDeals-We don't have an Amazon app store to give us a free app a day, but this app gives you a heads up on discounts and free-for-a-limited-time apps.
-Face Mask/Face Swap-a few apps from MS Research, you can do goofy stuff with your pics
-Screen Capturer-If you jailbreak your phone (and there are only a few tokens left of the official Chevron tool, so get on it) this is the type of app that provides functionality that should've been included in the OS by default
-SkyMap Free-Like Google SkyMap
-Timedancer Ep1 and 2. Goofy little storytelling sci-fi app. Episode 1 is free
-TuneWiki-Displays lyrics as your Zune songs play
-Tweet It!-Fun Twitter app, definitely NOT for power users, but quick loading and great look
At first I was like WTF are you talking then I saw the news. Microsoft is mad. 10,000 tokens only (and that's per device not individualI've owned 3 different WPs already) and now they wont continue the program?! Fuck em.
Ars Technica had a very good article about Android 'fragmentation':
http://arstechnica.com/gadgets/news...-thing-as-android-only-android-compatible.ars
Android doesn't 'fragment' because Android isn't a single monolithic OS design, with a closed-source model which is enforced by a multibillion-dollar corporate entity. Google doesn't give a shit about Android 'fragmentation', because they don't make any money off selling the OS itself, but rather from Android Market and advertising. If we stop thinking of Android the same way we think about Windows, Mac OS/iOS, and other monolithic OSes, then we won't incorrectly think there is a problem. Because there isn't. Except for Verizon not getting NFL Mobile working on my Tuna, that's bullshit.
I'll just say it... but haven't you learned your lesson from Coperdickus about having an Android phone and posting in a Windows Phone thread? It doesn't lead to good things.
http://www.themobileindian.com/news/4385_Lumia-800-has-battery-problems-admits-Nokia
whats the number you get on the full charge capacity
as for the update it will be out in the next month
Well, I finally checked this. 978 mAh :-(
Let's hope the update really fixes this problem. Do you guys know if I could exchange my phone if it doesn't?
On Monday 12th December some of our customers started to comment in various social media that the preloaded diagnostics tool in some of the Nokia Lumia 800 phones was showing lower battery capacity than expected. We immediately started to investigate these reports and can now confirm that while the battery itself is fine, a software problem on certain variants is limiting the phones ability to access the full battery capacity. We want to stress that this issue has not been found to affect the recently introduced Nokia Lumia 710.
The good news is that as this is a software problem it can be easily resolved. The planned software update in early 2012, as well as including many performance enhancements, will also include a fix that will enable the affected phones to access the total battery capacity. For anyone who does not want to wait for the software update, Nokia can arrange for a replacement phone. Anyone who requires any further clarification should contact Nokia Care (Care contact details and locations can be found at www.Nokia.com/support ).
Anyone who wants to know if their phone is affected can run the battery status test from the diagnostics tool already installed on their phone. (The tool is designed for service use and only displays approximate values.) Dialling ##634# opens the diagnostics tool. By accepting the disclaimer and then selecting Battery Status from the list of options, anyone will be able to see their available battery charge capacity. If your full charge capacity reads less than 1000 mAh then your phone is affected with this specific issue and you may find it is necessary to charge your phone more frequently than normal. Once the software update has been applied, you should experience much better battery life. In the meantime here are some tips on how to increase your battery performance and you should also make sure you are using the charger that came with the phone, as older chargers may not be as effective at charging the new Nokia Lumia 800.
Think you can exchange it now, it is definitely a bad batch and not all phones because my capacity reads 1512 mAh
looked around, here is the nokia press release
I've got 2 800s here, the wife's and mine, both have the borked battery reading. The patch is supposed to come out January 18th so hopefully that fixes things. She's an iOS jumper who likes WP7 well enough but stepping out with a 900+ mAh phone is kinda pathetic and that's affecting her user experience pretty badly.Hmm, sounds like the software update will fix it. I'd rather not exchange it if i don't have to.
Just my luck :-(
so for giggles i installed ICS on my HTC Desire just for comparison against my HD7 (same chipset, same clock speeds), its not a complete laggy mess, but its not wp7 smooth either, but i'd imagine that with some better use of the gfx chip for the ui it'd be a lot better but at the moment it leaves a lot to be desired on lower end hardware, I'm probably going to pick up a HTC Rhyme, so I'll root and install ICS on that so that'll give a better comparison to this gen of wp7 than the 1st gen.
The comparison means dick if the ICS rom you install isn't full hardware accelerated. ICS on something as "slow" as a Samsung vibrant or nexus s runs so much smoother than any previous iteration of the OS with android I know that's not saying much, heh).
So everyone now I have on Facebook seems to have discovered Kik and have started installing it.
I'd always seen it on the Market when I was on Android but never knew anyone who used it so never bothered installing it, but since people I know are using it now I thought I'd give it a go on WP7 and it's actually a great app, leaps and bounds ahead of the steaming turd that is Whatsapp on WP7.
Photoshop Mockup of the 900 based on the leaked ads
http://thenokiablog.com/2012/01/02/nokia-lumia-900-full-mockup/
![]()
![]()