Linked by Liam Proven on Wed 10th Jan 2007 16:42 UTC
PDAs, Cellphones, Wireless Symbian recently announced that its OS has powered 100 million phones. That's not bad - it's a lot of licences - but then, mobile phones shift around a billion units a year now. But a phone with Symbian isn't any old phone. It's a smartphone.
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RE: My take
by lproven on Thu 11th Jan 2007 01:55 UTC in reply to "My take"
lproven
Member since:
2006-08-23

Well, if you mean by that that there is nothing resembling what I want out there, then yes, you're right.

But if you mean that I can't tell you what I'd like, well, no.

Actually, as of last night, I want an iPhone ;-), but even so, lovely as it is, it doesn't do all I want from a PDA and could not.

What I was saying was that the requirements of my ideal PDA and those of my ideal phone are too different for any one device to be both. It's not possible.

For the PDA:

I want a C21 Psion 5mx: something like a Nokia N800 Internet Tablet, but in the form factor of the Psion, and additionally with the same range of apps as the Psion and a keyboard as good as the Psion's.

For the phone:

I want a Nokia 6310i, with 3G and Wifi, plus a bigger higher-res screen, more flexible UI, more customisability and masses of memory, which can seamlessly sync to any kind of computer - Windows, Mac, Linux, whatever - via USB2 or wirelessly. It should, in essence, be a phone with an integral high-capacity USB pendrive. I don't care if it has a camera or colour or MP3 or any of those things, as long as it's big and solid and robust and fast and easy to use, small enough to fit easily into a pocket and runs for ages on its standard battery.

Neither is hard to do. The technology is here today and quite widespread. But nothing like either exists.

Why not?

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