that is the question.
who owns your data is the second one.
that is the question.
who owns your data is the second one.
it’s “only” a matter of time now…
until the linux-powered asus eee 701 arrives at my doorstep!
i’m one of 16 finnish people buying it from nutrius.de, a german shop that claims it will receive its first shipments of the eee in december update: january 10th is the “confirmerd” date. i had been looking out for the eee for quite some time already, and when preorders were accepted in german online-shops, a guy named lauri100 at a finnish forum “muropaketti” got a good deal with nutrius.de (since we’re 16 people ordering).
stores in finland are a bit slower, but preorders are accepted at verkkokauppa and datavirta. tietokonekauppa and multitronic had a preorder-page available, but not any longer. wonder why? in any case, it seems it will take much longer for the stores in finland to get them in stock.
so i was reading slashdot today, about nokia opposing the ogg format and deeming it “proprietary”. one of the comments nailed my feelings about nokia:
the Nokia of five years ago is probably not the Nokia of today. Where old Nokia was trying to deliver devices to let you do whatever you wanted to do, new Nokia is trying to become a media company and that means is almost certainly joining the dark side.
nokia certainly has changed during the years. i’ll illustrate my point by relating to some of the nokia phones i’ve owned.
nokia 6110: before the millennium, a good piece of mobile phone using the gsm network.
could do text messages and had an alarm. it felt like quite an investment at the time, but its quality was as good as anything. it was a nokia and i took pride in nokia being a finnish company.
nokia n-gage: it’s 2003, and oh my, did nokia fuck up with this device.
aimed at the young and hip, someone at nokia should’ve been fired for thinking that being dumbo is cool.
yet the n-gage had its merits, and in 2004 i bought one. why? beacuse, like the asus eee today, it was cheap and technically advanced. if you felt too cool to bother about looking like dumbo, you got yourself an n-gage at 100euros in 2004, and you could do: web surfing, instant messaging (messenger, icq), email, calendar, ftp, listen and record radio, mp3 player with mmc card and use it as a speaker as well. for a hundred euros. in 2004! in a sense, nokia had never been better. but that’s not because they tried to, but because they fucked up, and were desperate to enter the gaming market. (where they failed, miserably. and as a sign of future decay, nokia later released the n-gageQD – priced the same, better designed, but had poor mp3 support and no radio!!)
nokia n80 internet edition: it’s late 2006 and nokia brags about it’s n-series “computers“. feeling the need to get a faster device with wlan and more pixels, i wait for the n80ie, which promises so much, more than the already existing n80, which, it turns out, has the exact same hardware as the n80ie, and can be upgraded to n80ie later. for this fact alone, i wish nokia burns in hell. not only does the availability date for the “internet edition” constantly postpone, i become hugely disappointed at nokia when the n80ie finally arrives.
the n80ie, selling for 480 euros at the time, is indeed a potent phone. yet it disappoints in so irritating ways. here goes:
so in conclusion, nokia just didn’t pay attention to open source and linux but rather thought hey, sms was such a bloody good cash cow for the phone operators, let’s team up with them and make even more money!
and what can you say to that? nokia is a listed company, it tries to make money to its shareholders. yeah whatever, nokia, you still suck badly. kallasvuo suck harder. the “comes with music” that nokia is keen to promote, seems to me it is about to walk the same path as vista. the alternative? linux and the eee.