Leaked Photo Shows Touch-Screen BlackBerry 10 Phone 112
alancronin tips this quote from CNet:
"A new leaked photo of the BlackBerry 10 smartphone, or the 'London,' promises a completely different looking BlackBerry than the world is used to. According to the BlackBerry news site N4BB, a photo of the device (which is designed by Porsche) shows a slender touch-screen phone that is the color 'gun metal.' Several apps are shown in the photo, including Facebook, BBM, and DocsToGo. ... The London is the first BlackBerry 10 and is slated to have a TI OMAP dual-core CPU running at 1.5GHz, as well as 1GB of RAM, 16GB storage, and an 8-megapixel camera."
Irrelevance and mediocrity (Score:5, Interesting)
The entire reason I loved my blackberry was its keyboard-centeredness. Why the heck do I want a business phone that has a crappy touch keyboard? Theres android and iPhone for that.
I guess we still get the BES stuff, but which users are actually going to want a blackberry? If youre going to mandate a business phone, why mandate one that sucks at being a business phone?
I mean, I guess what they had wasnt selling phones, and their market share was shrinking-- seems logical to make a change, right? Except they just killed 80% of what made blackberry so popular to begin with. Being just another touch-device clone isnt really the way to claw your way back into the game.
With keyboard as well (Score:4, Informative)
RIM have already announced there will be a version with a physical keyboard and a 720*720 screen, for "real" BB users. The BB on-screen keyboard as on the PlayBook is, in my view, better than others, but I agree: as someone who uses a BB for messaging, I am waiting for the keyboard version. Preferably the slider.
Currently the meme is that RIM is dying and I suspect this has its origins in the large and well staffed Apple and Microsoft PR departments. But consider: the difference between a BB phone and Android/iOS is that the BB doesn't phone home all your private information to Google or Apple. A lot of "apps" are basically Trojans for privacy violation. What message do you think that RIM is addressing to corporates, right now?
Re:With keyboard as well (Score:4, Insightful)
Currently the meme is that RIM is dying and I suspect this has its origins in the large and well staffed Apple and Microsoft PR departments
Um. Okay. Nothing to do with Blackberrys being shit to use, and requiring a third party server add on to work effectively, then?
Have you actually tried one? (Score:5, Informative)
Apple and Google have very carefully shifted the grounds away from considerations of message security and integrity, messaging flexibility, and privacy to - ooh shiny! Angry Birds! But I suspect that eventually people will realise that it's panem et circenses to keep the mass buyers happy. A phone is always a compromise as a media device, which is why screen sizes keep creeping up, and a media device is always a compromise as a phone (too big, battery life too short).
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I've had to support Blackberry users several times in the last 10 years, and the configurations options on the phone are just organised really badly. I'm sure the interface is fine for using if it's set up correctly, but it's not like iOS or Android are hard to message with either.
I'm happy with HTTPS security, I don't work for a government agency.
I don't see Exchange as a third party add-on, because we already used Exchange for years before ActiveSync DirectPUSH came out. It's not "third party" because it
I do work for a government agency... (Score:1)
I'm happy with HTTPS security, I don't work for a government agency.
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I hope you're interested in mechanical engineering, and where I might be going for lunch. You'd be better off monitoring Skype though.
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Unsecured email access is how massively expensive leaks and intrusions occur. They tend to be a LOT less likely with remote wipe capability, built in device memory / storage encryption, and effectively (for all meaningful purposes) uncrackable transport security.
HTTPS is fine, as long as you are super confident in all of those trusted root authorities, or if youre not using a self-signed cert. Both of those are remarkably unsafe assumptions.
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No, self-signed is like a poor-mans version of symetrical encryption. Unless you remove all other trusted root authorities-- which Ive never heard of someone doing, but maybe Im wrong-- your device will happily accept a NON-self-signed cert in its place at any time. Which means that now youre trusting everyone-and-their-mother who has a root signing cert (includes several "interesting" countries), as well as trusting how your device handles recognizing that particular self-signed cert (will it simply igno
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I use IMAP with TLS encryption on my Android devices, and full device encryption with pin code to access. I have remote wipe and locator functions through a third-party anti-virus app. I don't see any benefit of using a BB at this point.
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All members of our department were given or offered BlackBerry Bold 9000-series phones... 3 of us tried to use them but gave them back, 1 didn't accept it to begin with, 1 was the dept head and he's sick of it and waiting for the iPhone 5. Only one person kept their BlackBerry, and that person is the BES admin... and he's consistently frustrated with it.
So, in our world you have:
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Its entirely possible that none of those users are too concerned with email / phone, and are more concerned with "other things" the phone can do. That being the case, a blackberry would be the polar opposite of what they wanted.
and our relatively generous policies.
One of the reasons BES's benefits arent that great for you. Most of the benefit on the admin side is the massive control you have.
Im not sure what the frustration your users might have experienced was, but Ill say that initially I was frustrated with my blackberry (4 or so years ag
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The first part of your post is spot on. RIM dropped the ball, sitting on their laurels as others surpassed them.
keyboard wise, swype(on my droid) is a life saver, but still not as good as my torch for typing.
from an IT and admin point of view, BB is still more secure than any other phone. there are no good corporate tools for managing droids and iPhones to prevent intentional and unintentional data loss. I for one will keep an open mind till i see what BB 10 and BB10 server? can do before deciding.
I had hop
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At least a few of the issues you mentioned simply arent real problems blackberries have:
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FWIW, I'm happy with VPN+IMAP with the iPhone. I'm not interested in having to purchase, install, and maintain RIM's crap software + exchange + windows to use a Crackberry when a Linux box running Scalix or Exim works just as well with the iPhone - for free. :-)
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But consider: the difference between a BB phone and Android/iOS is that the BB doesn't phone home all your private information to Google or Apple.
My level of caring about that given the work I do is pretty minimal. What I have always cared about is being able to make calls without looking at the screen, having robust keyboard shortcuts, and having a keyboard that never, ever, ever fails to register a keystroke or register a hardware button.
My old blackberry bold hit all of those criteria; it may have occasionally stuttered (even while taking notes) but I could fly on that keyboard and it would keep up. I got a new "BlAndroid" (as I call it-- a Moto
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+1 my thoughts exactly,
Re:Irrelevance and mediocrity (Score:4, Informative)
Been using touchscreen BB since the storm. Truly a horrible machine, hardware-wise, and the storm 2 wasn't much better. But, and I suspect I may be in a minority, I still prefer my storm 2 touchscreen to my SGS2 for one simple reason - the hardware "click". I've lost count of the number of times I've cursed at Android for following a link (i.e. picking up a 'click') when I'm actually just trying to scroll. Never happened on the BB, not even once.
As for bb and "keyboard-centeredness" I came from a Bold 9700 to the Storm, and if I had a time machine and could go back, I'd give up the keyboard in exchange for display real-estate again in a heartbeat, despite the shortcomings of the storm. I did curse, throw fits and desperately miss the physical keyboard for a couple of weeks but after that, I became accustomed to the touch keyboard and now don't miss the physical keyboard at all...
I'm not convinced the keyboard alone accounted for "80% of the popularity". For me I could care less - it's BBM and Push/Notifications that make it my choice of 'business' phone.
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Maybe part of the problem is hand-size. Ive got monstrous hands (Im 6'7 or so), and accurately hitting links or text locations in edit mode is phenomenally frustrating. With trackpad + physical keyboard, none of this was ever an issue. My perfect device would be the Bold you mentioned but with a touchscreen for those things touch is good for.
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I had a Bold 9700 for about three years and loved it for email. The keyboard allowed me to type so quickly and with minimal errors. Unfortunately the thing was falling apart so I had to upgrade. My choice was Android or iPhone. Seeing as the Blackberry was a work phone and I already I have an Android (Galaxy Nexus currently and many other Android phones previously) for personal use, I thought I'd give the iPhone a shot. I seriously couldn't see myself doing the same level of emails on an Android compared t
Personal experience (Score:4, Interesting)
Speech is all very well, but there are many circumstances when it is inconvenient - for the hearing impaired (there are rather a lot of us), in meetings/lectures/seminars, or where ambiguity or being overheard must be avoided, as with user names, passwords etc.
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Our department works under the premise that if more than a couple of emails go back and forth over a topic, we get on the phone. Especially if it's sensitive or urgent.
Good thinking. That way, there's no paper trail and none of you can be blamed when everything goes wrong. It also ensures that you can't escalate a problem to anyone who hasn't been involved from the start without having to explain it all over again, so everybody wins.
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Legitimate business people... (Score:5, Insightful)
What makes one a legitimate business person?
Is that a euphemism for prostitutes and drug dealers?
If you have to write 50 emails a day from a mobile device, you have made a serious vocational error.
Really? (Score:2)
These people are legitimate business users, and we have to support them.
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If you have to write 50 emails a day from a mobile device, you have made a serious vocational error.
Theres this profession called "IT consulting". The more successful you are, the more emails youre writing, and quick access to them is pretty fundamental to getting things done efficiently.
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Unfortunately, BlackBerry has made some strategic errors and the result has been organizations deciding not to go with the BES model. So yes, you end up with a choice between some Android phone or an iPhone.
One solution is a small Bluetooth keyboard. They are cheap and easy to deal with and much smaller than a full-size keyboard. These work with both Android and iPhone equally well.
I think RIM has turned the wrong corner in not making it clear to customers the difference between the BES + encrypted devic
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If you're writing more than 50 or more emails a day -- you're just not going to use an iPhone.
If you're writing more than 50 emails a day while on the move, you need a laptop, not a phone with keyboard.
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Laptops make awful phones, and TBQH the email, contact, and calendar access on a blackberry beats the pants off anything Outlook has to offer. Its always on me, it always has data, its always synced, and its always able to remind me of appointments. I can also whip it out, write a 2 paragraph email, and holster it again before youve even booted your laptop up.
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Laptops make awful phones
Laptop is not a substitute for a phone, true, but neither is a phone a substitute for a laptop.
. I can also whip it out, write a 2 paragraph email, and holster it again before youve even booted your laptop up.
Have you seen how fast Macbook Air wakes from sleep? It's about as long as it takes for you to open the clamshell...
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My laptop has an SSD, and I reckon it is a far sight faster than a Macbook Air. My point stands; I dont think you realize how fast I can type an email on a candybar blackberry.
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The entire reason I loved my blackberry was its keyboard-centeredness. Why the heck do I want a business phone that has a crappy touch keyboard? Theres android and iPhone for that.
I guess we still get the BES stuff, but which users are actually going to want a blackberry? If youre going to mandate a business phone, why mandate one that sucks at being a business phone?
I mean, I guess what they had wasnt selling phones, and their market share was shrinking-- seems logical to make a change, right? Except they just killed 80% of what made blackberry so popular to begin with. Being just another touch-device clone isnt really the way to claw your way back into the game.
This is the classic innovator's dilemma. It is how once great companies can miss the boat on new markets. They are constrained and encumbered by the demands and wants of their current customer base, which are responsible for the huge profits. Satisfying current customer demands can result in not allocating enough resources needed to develop technologies for emerging/new markets. It is easy to ignore new markets as they do not initially provide the profit opportunities that the companies current market pr
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If in some alternate reality a car maker in the 1890s was going out of business because everyone was raving over the new horse-and-buggy, I would be much happier that they stick to their "failing" model rather than removing their excellent product from the market. Thats basically how I feel now-- in the name of general purpose cellphones and youtube everywhere, we are giving up one of the most outstanding business comms form factors.
Physical keyboards disappearing-- whats not to love? Unless of course you
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I had a Blackberry Curve back in 07. In 09 I got a shiny new Android phone. Then I got a Palm Pixi. Then I realized what I really missed was my Blackberry. I like push notifications. I like being able to forget to charge my device for a night or two. I don't want a glorified game console, I don't have time to waste like that. That's just me.
That said, the current Blackberry software sucks. Whenever you upgrade or delete an app, the phone has to reboot. Acceptable for 2007. Insane for 2012.
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My one major complaint about the 9900 is the battery life. Even with wifi turned on (which, if you're in range of wifi all the time, lengthens battery life), I'm lucky if mine lasts 24 hours. Granted I get a crapload of mail, but it was really nice to charge 2-3 times a week.
That being said, the 9900 is pretty nice. The keyboard is big enough, screen resolution is nice, touchscreen is pretty nice, my only other complaint was they got rid of the "Reader" function in the web browser (but I guess that's wha
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That said, the current Blackberry software sucks. Whenever you upgrade or delete an app, the phone has to reboot. Acceptable for 2007. Insane for 2012.
There was a lot that sucked about the Blackberry OS, but Ive seen what the alternative is, and Im happy to accept those shortcomings for what I got in return.
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BB10 will launch with a touchscreen model. A keyboard model is expected to come 3-4 weeks later. it will be very much like the BB phones of old. hald screen, half keyboard.
And reviews of that touchscreen keyboard say that it is amazing and better than anything out there. And it's patented.
Re: BES no more? (Score:2)
I've heard rumors [bgr.com] that the new phones won't support BES natively, but be part of a new overall BES architecture [blackberry.com]. Where the "new" BES will be a management console for the "old" BES that you all know and love, and a VPN like service for the new phones/playbook.
IMHO this will help kill BB. The one solid thing you could count on was BES, now you're adding complexity with multiple BES servers, multiple UIs, and hoping it all gels together while you're trying to keep your head above water. That, and the consumer
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from my understanding (BB mobile fusion http://us.blackberry.com/business/software/blackberry-mobile-fusion.html#tab-1 [blackberry.com] )... and since i havnt deployed, just read some info, take with a grain of salt.
there is a separate manager for iPhone and droid devices to deploy BB software to apple store and play store (droid?) and to centrally rule them all through one console. That way if your corporate infrastructure allows for multi-brand (bb, Apple, Droid) phones you can mange them from one location.
is this good? (Score:1)
and is slated to have a TI OMAP dual-core CPU running at 1.5GHz
Is this considered good or no?
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Slated for 2013 (Score:3)
http://www.tomshardware.com/news/nvidia-tegra-4-wayne-arm-a15,15261.html [tomshardware.com]
By 2013, NVidia's Tegra 4 gonna be out.
It's rumored to have a Kepler GPU and run 10 times the performance of Tegra2, more or less the equivalent to the TI-chip the Blackberry is based on.
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http://www.tomshardware.com/news/nvidia-tegra-4-wayne-arm-a15,15261.html [tomshardware.com]
By 2013, NVidia's Tegra 4 gonna be out.
It's rumored to have a Kepler GPU and run 10 times the performance of Tegra2, more or less the equivalent to the TI-chip the Blackberry is based on.
What's the power consumption on that going to be like?
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Wrong product name (Score:5, Funny)
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They should call it the Blackberry 12, since it'll be released one chapter after Chapter 11.
RIM is a profitable company. You know, they're adding money to their bank account quarter after quarter. That's not the best way to approach bankruptcy.
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That's known as "moving the goalposts". Your parent was responding only to the notion that RIM is a profitable company; he didn't say anything about them going bankrupt.
As to another reply that this is just accounting losses due to write-offs: their revenue was down 25% over last year. That's a bad place to be in when everyone but Apple is seeing slimmer profit margins and needing higher revenue to make up the difference.
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Re:Wrong product name (Score:5, Insightful)
RIM has no debt. Has over $2B in the bank. They will be fine.
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How long do you think that is going to last if the US gov't certifies another platform for gov't use? Because you know that is happening...
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Yep. A thin rectangle with rounded corners...and the icons are arranged in a grid!
Leaked photos (Score:2)
Leaked photos are sooo 2003. They need to step up their game a bit, maybe have an exciting car chase as the photo-taker desperately tries to make it to a hotspot.
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They should do something original like leave one in a pub.
Doesn't tell you much (Score:3)
Does everything have to be a rectangular grid of icons? With a shiny screen?
The video seems to be a video of a phone playing another video showing the battery replacement procedure.
"Gun-metal color"? Right. If they actually made the thing out of Parkerized steel, it would be a great industrial-strength design. But what we're probably seeing is the usual scheduled consumer electronics color rotation from black to white to grey and back to black. Yawn.
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Maybe they're simply trying to take the heat off Samsung.
In all seriousness though it doesn't all have to be a grid of icons. The tile concept in the Windows Phone is a truly marvellous ... ok how about the hexagonal layout of icons in the earlier windows phone surely that's a stroke of brilli....
You know what? I'm staying with grided icons.
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WP8 has smaller tiles, which are then about the same size as icons in iOS and Android (you get 4 small tiles in each horizontal row [blogspot.com]). Also don't forget that it doesn't put all your tiles on the start screen, you pick & choose, and there's a separate list of all installed apps, much like Android.
So the only real difference is that in WP live tiles always serve as launchers for the associated app, while in Android widgets can do whatever when tapped. Well, and widgets are much less restricted in what kind
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Which is exactly the reason Microsoft or Apple doesn't allow any of that nonsense.
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In all seriousness though it doesn't all have to be a grid of icons. The tile concept in the Windows Phone is a truly marvellous ... ok how about the hexagonal layout of icons in the earlier windows phone surely that's a stroke of brilli....
There are other alternatives. As soon as there are more icons than will fit on the screen, the ease of use of an icon grid breaks down. At that point, the usual options are "pages", scrolling or a hierarchy. All of which break the simple paradigm.
Then, of course, there's "search". When things are known by their icons, rather than a textual name, search is painful.
Missing from description (Score:2)
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It runs QtMoko [sourceforge.net]?
just go android already (Score:1)
just go android already. keep the bb email system and bb messenger and the coporate guys would be fine with it. and get all the android apps the users would be happy about.
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just go android already. keep the bb email system and bb messenger and the coporate guys would be fine with it. and get all the android apps the users would be happy about.
It took RIM long enough to port that stuff to QNX, and now they should start all over again..? That's what brought Nokia to its knees.
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Don't get me wrong, QNX is a rock solid OS to build your mobile platform on. MeeGo is (was?) also very good. You could also say a lot of nice things about WebO
It's not only the hardware (Score:4, Insightful)
Sure, the hardware is a thing. But it's only a thing that supports better software and performance. The main thing is the things people can do with it.
The "wow" about iPhone, and later Android, was "look at all the things I can do with it! And the number of things I can do with it is growing like crazy!"
The thing about Android is "look at all the things I can do with it! with fewer restrictions! and cheaper!"
What does Blackberry bring? Developers? Apps? Freedom?
They bring business maturity. That's about it. Is it enough?
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The "wow" about iPhone, and later Android, was "look at all the things I can do with it! And the number of things I can do with it is growing like crazy!"
It's a bit surprising to remember that the app store didn't launch for over a year after the iPhone.
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It's a bit surprising to remember that the app store didn't launch for over a year after the iPhone.
As a Blackberry user at the time when the iPhone launched, my friends and I laughed at the iPhone. Our Blackberries were super powerful machines by comparison featuring things like voice dialing, voice notes, copy/paste, videos, third party apps (over the air no less!), GPS, MMS messaging, games, Bluetooth support that wasn't crap, instant messaging, expandable storage, removable battery, any MP3 as a ring tone, set a background picture, etc etc etc. About all the iPhone had going for it at the time was a g
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Frankly, the music player was enough. Even now, except for possibly Zune on WP7 depending on your tastes, media handling on cell phones is dismal AT BEST.
Then there was that web browser...you mean I can actually use the web on a phone? The G1 came out a year after the iPhone and looked positively archaic even at the time. It was Mobile Safari and Mobile Safari alone that has driven the development of the mobile web, quite literally since all other mobes are based on MOBILE webkit and not just website.
This i
I would consider one... (Score:2)
If it had a real keyboard and focused on being secure, didn't send my info everywhere, and was completely open, and lets me manage memory, disk space, processes and battery life. And lets me back it up easily to a Mac, and add patches..
In other words has everything I wish android had. I love my HTC Evo 4G but also it provides frustration. My biggest gripes are that it makes it impossible to do maintenance by hiding files or not providing simple utilities. It doesn't let me delete old attachments from main m
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That's why Windows Phones don't look like iPhones, and it's why Microsoft is losing in mobile.
And here we thought it was because the inertia of the poor history of Microsoft phones in general.
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That's why Windows Phones don't look like iPhones, and it's why Microsoft is losing in mobile.
And here we thought it was because the inertia of the poor history of Microsoft phones in general.
Or it could be Microsoft was late to the finger touchscreen game and held on to styluses for far too long.
The photo was cropped ... any rounded corner? (Score:4, Funny)
Unfortunately the photo was cropped and all I could see is a rectangular thingy.
Anyone saw any "rounded corner"?
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That line is getting REALLY tired...
But it never gets old. Makes me laugh every time, heheheh!
Re:The photo was cropped ... any rounded corner? (Score:5, Insightful)
That line is getting REALLY tired...
Normally I'd agree, but Apple's recent behaviour has made legal action over similar-looking devices very much a legitimate concern.
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The trap is that phone manufacturers are forced to gravitate towards the iPhone design.
Apple has created their own closed ecosystem of hardware and applications. All the devs are building applications designed with the iPhone in mind: rectangular multitouch screens; a single hardware button.
Phone manufacturers want applications on their devices too. Devs want to be able to port their applications easily without having to redesign and recode for other handsets.
It doesn't make sense to stray too far from the
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Unfortunately the photo was cropped and all I could see is a rectangular thingy.
Anyone saw any "rounded corner"?
That line is getting REALLY tired...
then perhaps you will enjoy this joke.
Q: Why is the corner rounded?
A: Because the line was REALLY tired.
"
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I would say that Apple being a patent troll monopoly wannabee who can no longer innovate is getting tired, but you would probably disagree.
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i saw rounded and shiny icons. i bet apple could squeeze out half a billion for that!
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And the icons were in a grid!
Which remind me, so was the icons of the LG Prada [wikipedia.org] phone, and it has rounded corners as well. And is was both unveiled and on sale one month before the iPhone.