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  • Itai
  • Member Since Jan 31st, 2007
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Engadget7 Comments
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@alex: people who are excited about a fully open source mobile platform that has the backing of a mega company like Nokia. The N810 was a small step in the right direction but suffered from insufficient power. With Omap 3 and 3G on board this new tablet will probably make a lot more noise.
Just get a Nokia N800 for $200, you get an FM radio, Internet Radio Tuner, Web Browser and media player. What a rip!
The N800 is fully capable of running the new operating system. Basically the N810 is a smaller, N800 with a keyboard and built in GPS and hardware redesign. The internals are EXACTLY the same the CPU, the RAM, everything is exactly the same so if you update your N800 to Chinook or OS2008 you will have the same user experience as the N810 user. The N800 is now around $250 and will be supported by Nokia for at least a year longer.
The update is awesome but really these features should have been on the N800 from the outset. I think the problems users have been reporting are the result of backups which seem to be incompatible with the new firmware. The N800 is great gear for those who want mobile browsing and with 16GB of memory thats substantial multimedia.
You can already do one way video calling if you have a 3G GSM phone, its a bit of a hack but check this out.

http://www.pocketcaster.com/comvu/Introduction.htm
ah good to see that Series 60 still evokes the
love it or hate it response. Over the last two
years, I have used windows mobile, palm, s60, and
a blackberry.
The best for business was WindowsMo, the best for
third party apps was Palm, the best email was the
RIM device (no contest), the best multimedia was
the symbian. This phone is not meant for business
users hence no touchscreen, its really meant for
people who want one device to listen to music and
take semi-decent pictures. For this purpose I
think its a clear winner.
The iPhone is probably going to be a better music
device but the fact of the 5 mp camera as well as
gps and open architecture means until iPhone 2.0
this will be my weekend device, its simply the
most advanced converged device out there. (By the
way I have had hands on with this phone)
The N95 has a standard 3.5mm headphone jack on the device as well as a remote attachment that accepts the standard 3.5mm headphone jack. If you want better headphones then just buy them.
Free Vista, sure.
Let the hive mind of Engadget get that for you.
"I just switched to Sprint from Verizon about three months ago for the Pre. Then I went for the Hero about a week ago. Now, I miss my hardware keyboard and am thinking about switching to the Moment. I am still able to switch back to Verizon if I want and get the Droid when it arrives. Should I just trade up to the Moment when it comes out, see if I like it, and if not switch to the Droid? Or something else entirely? Help!"

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