Hmmm, maybe I should talk my parents into getting that Lumia 710 because all my mom cares about is Facebook anyway, is it a pretty safe bet from HW quality etc perspective? I haven't used one yet
Any features you would like in a streaming app?
Cool. I checked last week and it wasn't being pushed out yet for Rogers. I'll install it tonight as the keyboard bug can be annoying.Installing the 8107 update!! (Phone: Focus, Carrier: Rogers)
Impressed that it is already being sent out by Rogers. Now if Rogers could show some WP love on their website, etc.
Cool. I checked last week and it wasn't being pushed out yet for Rogers. I'll install it tonight as the keyboard bug can be annoying.
I'm assuming that doing this upgrade won't mess up my Internet Sharing that I enabled after doing ChevronWP7. Any one else try this yet?
They will.I hope AT&T pushes out 8107.
Feb 27th.I'm bored, when is the mobile world congress?
glen1 said:My Lumia 800 (1600.2483.8107.11501) problems include:-
1. Moving tiles long distances on the home screen does not flow properly. You need to drop the tile first before continuing.
2. Keyboard has intermittent delays causing the user to see the same character 2 or 3 times.
3. Critical alarm goes off too early and minutes later the OS battery is no longer critical.
4. Moving between songs there is a loud noise at zero volume and 1-30 levels. While playing a song, lock the phone and wait 5 seconds. Then unlock your phone and quickly move between songs, there is no noise for a few seconds and then it starts again.
5. Sound quality is poor from the loud speaker, Bluetooth and audio jack.
6. Nokia feedback within the settings tab has been limited to once only now. Nokia does not seem interested in customers providing ongoing feedback.
7. The Nokia drive direction voice occasionally stutters, taking about a minute to complete one command.
8. Video play back frames are missed on some videos. Audio keeps working.
9. Battery does not charge to manufactures specification.
10. Battery saver function is not working properly. On HTC HD7, Battery Saver (low) makes a big different.
11. Camera quality is poor for a Nokia phone.
12. Camera is set to macro by default.
13. Video auto focus still needs more improvements.
14. Low volume level is too high from audio jack. High volume level from the speaker is too low. Poor bass levels.
OS UI now flows smoother on the new firmware.
http://www.wpcentral.com/nokia-running-lumia-800-battery-fix-update#comments
This guy nails it for the Lumia 800, too many software issues and they even fucked up the lighting of the soft keys with this latest update.
Despite all that, it is still a sexy phone.
Meh I'm becoming very dissolutioned with the platform as a whole, but I feel like I'm the odd man out around here.
I haven't jumped onto WP7.
I may lean towards Android if the Optimus Black will receive a ICS update.
Yeah, we know.Meh I'm becoming very dissolutioned with the platform as a whole, but I feel like I'm the odd man out around here.
Meh I'm becoming very dissolutioned with the platform as a whole, but I feel like I'm the odd man out around here.
I like the os but there are several things I want from Apollo.Meh I'm becoming very dissolutioned with the platform as a whole, but I feel like I'm the odd man out around here.
- lock screen notification shortcuts. if i get a text i should be able to get to it directly from the lock screen. third party app support too.
.
I like the os but there are several things I want from Apollo.
- task switcher needs to go beyond five and/or allow fast resume from app list and start screen.
- a central hub for notifications. copy android/ios 5 if need be.
- apps. not really in microsoft's hands though as the tools are there.
- phone management. backups, updates, app management. things that itunes does.
- folders. please. some sort of better organization for apps.
- screenshots
- better cloud support. full size photo support in skydrive. wireless backups. ota updates.
- lock screen notification shortcuts. if i get a text i should be able to get to it directly from the lock screen. third party app support too.
- separate ring tone and media volumes.
- custom alert sounds.
- system wide search.
folders. please. some sort of better organization for apps.
Why.Hell no.
Why.
Because you already have hubs and a main screen for live tiles.
Plus it goes against Metro blahblahblah, you get the idea.
For me, I just see them as plain ugly.
Because you already have hubs and a main screen for live tiles.
Plus it goes against Metro blahblahblah, you get the idea.
For me, I just see them as plain ugly.
Hell no.
are there any free guides on developing for wp7 mainly games. 2D and/or 3D. also what are some developer tools are at my desposal?
Yeah, we know.
Have your needs changed? Has MS decided to move in a direction other than what you were expecting?
I've switched platforms before (TWICE!!) so I can absolutely understand moving on, just know that all platforms have issues.
Updates on Android suck, Apple pulled a dick move with Siri not being on iPhone 4, plus their OS is still way too plain and boring for me. I think Nokia plus MS has the best chance of giving me the software/hardware combo I want, but if Apple can refresh their OS and offer a 4" plus device (all likely later this year), they may be worth a look as well. They have been willing to adopt great ideas from competitors (notification shade, twitter integration, and the rumored FB integration). If they can get past the stupid static icons (copy live tiles), they would be unbeatable with their app selection, the great update cycle, plus their amazing hardware designs.
I just think MS will get there first, we'll see this fall. I have an update next year, and I'm always looking.
Hadn't heard IGN gave the Nokia 900 best in show too. Pretty cool
Maybe companies will realize industrial design is important?What gets me about stuff like this is not that I like to see the platform finally getting some good pub, but where has this all been? Hardware and software wise the Nokia phones aren't doing that much different than anyone with a launch Samsung or HTC phone updated with Mango. Did everyone just forget about WP7 until now, and they are finally getting a taste of the platform again?
Maybe companies will realize industrial design is important?
Look for a Samsung Focus on Craigslist, Kijiji, or whatever your local popular buy/sell site is.I kinda have a new obsession, collecting phones.
Android is my primary phone, picked up a Pre 2 to check out webOS. I wanna get a WP7 phone to play around with, but don't want to spend too much. Anyone see any deals on decent unlocked GSM phones around $100 or so?
Look for a Samsung Focus on Craigslist, Kijiji, or whatever your local popular buy/sell site is.
I would also suggest a LG Optimus 7. Great little phone. Picked one up for $150, might be less now. My primary is a Gs2 but I really like Wp7. Bit of A phone nut myself.I kinda have a new obsession, collecting phones.
Android is my primary phone, picked up a Pre 2 to check out webOS. I wanna get a WP7 phone to play around with, but don't want to spend too much. Anyone see any deals on decent unlocked GSM phones around $100 or so?
The biggest thing I miss on WP7 from Android is all the Google integration. Also Bing maps is terrible as is the navigation compared to Google. Keeping my eye on the Nokia phones for this though. One of the thing I like more about WP7 is the consistency throughout the OS and even the apps. Plus the keyboard is Much better imo.After playing around with Android's Ice Cream Sandwich, what exactly am I missing in terms of the user experience for WP7?
Someone here will mention that Metro typography won't be used ubiquitously, but aside from that?
After playing around with Android's Ice Cream Sandwich, what exactly am I missing in terms of the user experience for WP7?
Someone here will mention that Metro typography won't be used ubiquitously, but aside from that?
After playing around with Android's Ice Cream Sandwich, what exactly am I missing in terms of the user experience for WP7?
Someone here will mention that Metro typography won't be used ubiquitously, but aside from that?
Access to the entire device.
One of the thing I like more about WP7 is the consistency throughout the OS and even the apps.
Someone here will mention that Metro typography won't be used ubiquitously, but aside from that?
So it means behaving like a BlackBerry?ICS has it's own design guidelines and the new font Roboto. We'll see if anybody actually follows the design guidelines but Matias Duarte is trying.
Unless you really love the Metro design language, there really isn't anything in WP7 that iOS and Android do better. On Android you have widgets on the home screen instead of Live Tiles, different visually but functionally identical. I can't think of anything else unique about WP7, some people like the Zune music player UI but there's a clone music player for Android that ports that UI over. Otherwise Android has a number of superior music players like PowerAmp and PlayerPro.
ICS is the fastest and smoothest that Android has ever been, but it can't approach the fluidity of iOS and it doesn't post to Facebook as fast as WP7. This will never change, because having true multitasking on a mobile OS will always make Android heavier than the competitors. If you're adapted to the iOS or WP7 way of doing things, you won't really understand what true multitasking means until the first time you pop open Photobucket Mobile, copy an image URL from your album, hit the new magic ICS Task Switcher button, instantly switch to the Browser at the page you were on, paste the URL into the NeoGAF post you're composing, and hit Post and there's your post with the image from your Photobucket. Then you hit the magic button and you're in the YouTube app at the last video you viewed, you hit Copy URL and hit the magic button and switch to the Facebook app and it's on the last person's Wall/Timeline you were looking at and you paste it in and hit Post and you've posted the YouTube video you were looking at on your friend's Wall/Timeline.
True multitasking means everything's state is saved exactly as it was when you left it, on every app cached in memory, unless you run enough apps to trigger Android's memory management and it starts killing apps you haven't used in awhile. This is actually pretty unnerving to people who came from iPhones, because they're used to always seeing the app's home screen or front page when they relaunch it from the app drawer. The idea of the app's last state being perpetually saved, even if they return to the app the next day, is completely foreign to them. But that's what true multitasking is, and sure it means Android isn't as fluid, sometimes it stalls and chugs a bit even in ICS. But it's up to you if you value the concept of a smartphone OS that truly behaves like a desktop OS in terms of how it handles multiple applications or not.