GTsz Xqlusive
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You really think so given it took nearly 2 years to come up with the 5800? What do you think they can do in 6 months? What makes you think they can make it a real touch OS (or UI)? Haven't you seen the Nokia track record?
I think they will get it right one day, but I suspect it will take them years. That's the glacial pace at which Nokia works.
I won't lie, the newer 5800 FWs have made it a better device, but fundamentally it still sucks. The browser is still terrible. I mean why spend $800 on a phone when you know there are far better mobile browsers in the world that could cost you far less. Even without a contract those devices are cheaper than this phone.
I guess we could all hope that Nokia doesn't dare put the N-series name on a device that isn't great but we all saw the N96. A flagship no less. That's the only basis for any hope on this platform this year. Maybe in 2011 they'll figure out how to make an intelligent touchscreen interface.
But, anyway I've said my piece. I'll let those who choose to hope keep hoping. It is not my intent to trash this thread. If anything since I have no interest in this phone I shouldn't even be posting in this thread. But I did want to try to help people not hope for something that will likely not happen. Very likely not happen. Just make your expectations more realistic.
It will be a 5800 with widgets and some interface tweaks. Expect that and you may be surprised but more than likely it will be exactly that. A 5800 with a nicer design and finish, a slide out keyboard, a few tweaks here and here and widgets. I know Nokia well enough now, not to expect that the 6 month gap between the 5800 and the N97 will just be used for anything more than to get the widget platform ready for beta launch on the N97. The browser will be the same old crap. The onscreen keyboard will be the same old thing (the bigger screen will help though). The onscreen keyboards and keypads will never be as fast as the iPhone because that phone uses multitouch to get as fast as it does. I can have my second letter touched and registered before I've even released my first finger. That's what makes it so fast. The other alternative is to use it as a landscape only phone. Not a bad way to use it, but they made it really wide. So most of your webpages will be white spaces on the sides. Try reading a column of text with about 2 inches of height on your screen.
Again, make your expectations realistic. Let the 5800 and the 2 years it took them to create it be the basis for your expectations. I'm not saying you won't like it. In fact if you like the 5800 you'll like it. If anything the 5800 isn't so bad for $300.
Also, if you want to learn about the forefront of touch screen interfaces try an iPhone and/or a Palm Pre. Looks like those two are at the forefront. If however you want to pay $800 for a device that isn't even a contender but has a Nokia badge on it, the N97 is an excellent choice. I paid $800 for my N95, but that device was the best, clearly. I didn't buy it because it said "Nokia" on it. This will be an expensive name tag to buy.
They might surprise us and sell it for $450 which is about fair for what it is in today's more innovative market.
I think they will get it right one day, but I suspect it will take them years. That's the glacial pace at which Nokia works.
I won't lie, the newer 5800 FWs have made it a better device, but fundamentally it still sucks. The browser is still terrible. I mean why spend $800 on a phone when you know there are far better mobile browsers in the world that could cost you far less. Even without a contract those devices are cheaper than this phone.
I guess we could all hope that Nokia doesn't dare put the N-series name on a device that isn't great but we all saw the N96. A flagship no less. That's the only basis for any hope on this platform this year. Maybe in 2011 they'll figure out how to make an intelligent touchscreen interface.
But, anyway I've said my piece. I'll let those who choose to hope keep hoping. It is not my intent to trash this thread. If anything since I have no interest in this phone I shouldn't even be posting in this thread. But I did want to try to help people not hope for something that will likely not happen. Very likely not happen. Just make your expectations more realistic.
It will be a 5800 with widgets and some interface tweaks. Expect that and you may be surprised but more than likely it will be exactly that. A 5800 with a nicer design and finish, a slide out keyboard, a few tweaks here and here and widgets. I know Nokia well enough now, not to expect that the 6 month gap between the 5800 and the N97 will just be used for anything more than to get the widget platform ready for beta launch on the N97. The browser will be the same old crap. The onscreen keyboard will be the same old thing (the bigger screen will help though). The onscreen keyboards and keypads will never be as fast as the iPhone because that phone uses multitouch to get as fast as it does. I can have my second letter touched and registered before I've even released my first finger. That's what makes it so fast. The other alternative is to use it as a landscape only phone. Not a bad way to use it, but they made it really wide. So most of your webpages will be white spaces on the sides. Try reading a column of text with about 2 inches of height on your screen.
Again, make your expectations realistic. Let the 5800 and the 2 years it took them to create it be the basis for your expectations. I'm not saying you won't like it. In fact if you like the 5800 you'll like it. If anything the 5800 isn't so bad for $300.
Also, if you want to learn about the forefront of touch screen interfaces try an iPhone and/or a Palm Pre. Looks like those two are at the forefront. If however you want to pay $800 for a device that isn't even a contender but has a Nokia badge on it, the N97 is an excellent choice. I paid $800 for my N95, but that device was the best, clearly. I didn't buy it because it said "Nokia" on it. This will be an expensive name tag to buy.
They might surprise us and sell it for $450 which is about fair for what it is in today's more innovative market.