July 07, 2013 Re: Poll: how long have you been into D | ||||
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Posted in reply to Dicebot | On Sunday, 7 July 2013 at 17:44:20 UTC, Dicebot wrote: > On Sunday, 7 July 2013 at 17:37:37 UTC, 1100110 wrote: >> Please, I still have a physical keyboard on my new smartphone. >> >> Put your money where your mouth is. > > I must admit it becomes increasingly harder to find ones. I am not ware of a single new model that has both physical keyboard and less than 4.5" screen. Any hints? http://www.sonymobile.com/gb/products/phones/xperia-pro/gallery/ or any other sony phone with "pro" in the name. I used to have the xperia-mini-pro and was very pleased with it, but the small screen got annoying. I guess none of them count as that "new" though. |
July 07, 2013 Re: Poll: how long have you been into D | ||||
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Posted in reply to John Colvin | On Sunday, 7 July 2013 at 17:56:58 UTC, John Colvin wrote:
> I guess none of them count as that "new" though.
Yeah, Android 2.3 has some legacy smell :) Looks nice, wish they released something similar but with fresh h/w and OS. Still may work with some cyanogen magic, thanks!
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July 07, 2013 Re: Poll: how long have you been into D | ||||
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Posted in reply to Dicebot | On Sunday, 7 July 2013 at 17:44:20 UTC, Dicebot wrote: > I must admit it becomes increasingly harder to find ones. I am not ware of a single new model that has both physical keyboard and less than 4.5" screen. Any hints? Blackberry Q10 = 3.1" with 720 x 720 resolution: http://tech.fortune.cnn.com/2013/06/23/youre-going-to-love-the-blackberry-q10-or-hate-it/ But be careful, because for what I saw, BB is in trouble to achieve Google and Apple's success: http://money.cnn.com/2013/06/28/technology/mobile/blackberry-earnings/index.html Matheus. |
July 07, 2013 Re: Poll: how long have you been into D | ||||
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Posted in reply to MattCoder | On Sunday, 7 July 2013 at 18:09:24 UTC, MattCoder wrote:
> Blackberry Q10 = 3.1" with 720 x 720 resolution:
Any piece of hardware I can't install some custom tweaked OS on is not an option and RIM attitude has always sucked hard in that regard. That is not something I will support with my money.
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July 08, 2013 Re: Poll: how long have you been into D | ||||
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Posted in reply to Dicebot | On 07/07/2013 12:44 PM, Dicebot wrote: > On Sunday, 7 July 2013 at 17:37:37 UTC, 1100110 wrote: >> Please, I still have a physical keyboard on my new smartphone. >> >> Put your money where your mouth is. > > I must admit it becomes increasingly harder to find ones. I am not ware > of a single new model that has both physical keyboard and less than 4.5" > screen. Any hints? Umm... Forget the name of it, but Motorola XT897. Android 4.1 I think.. here: http://www.gsmarena.com/motorola_photon_q_4g_lte_xt897-4885.php (There's a 4.1 update out) Its a pretty decent phone. Lot's of phones are better I'm sure, but I haven't had any major issues with it. (And it was cheap!) And I haven't experienced the battery issues mentioned. I use my phone heavily for social media and such, almost constantly. The battery will last half a day with my usage. Much less if you don't pay attention to the battery hogs of course. But unlike my last phone if it dies, it only takes like 5-10 minutes to charge up enough to boot. Even if it's only plugged into a computer and not the wall. My last phone took like an hour before it would boot... Piece of crap. =P |
July 08, 2013 Re: Poll: how long have you been into D | ||||
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Posted in reply to H. S. Teoh | On Sun, 7 Jul 2013 16:51:32 -0700 "H. S. Teoh" <hsteoh@quickfur.ath.cx> wrote: > On Sun, Jul 07, 2013 at 02:38:15AM -0400, Nick Sabalausky wrote: > > > > Yea. I don't accept that "smartphones" are really phones. They're PDA's with telephony tacked on. > > Ah, what's in a name? If they want to call PDA's with telephony "smartphones" then so be it. I wouldn't sweat it with names that are arbitrary anyways. > True, but people just end up calling it a "phone" anyway, even though that's literally like referring to a car as a "portable radio". Or like the hipsters who insist on calling the internet a "cloud", as if they think there's some sort of distinction. Just too much "wrong word" going on in general. For non-native English speakers I can understand (English *is* goofy), but native speakers should know how to speak their own damn language. > > > Not saying that's necessarily a bad way to go - it's fine if PDA is your primary use-case. But if you're mainly interested in a phone it's not only complete overkill, but also the wrong set of design compromises. > > I guess the whole point was to have PDA functionality that included telephony so that you didn't have to carry two devices around? > > Mind you, having two devices isn't always a bad thing... try looking up something buried deep in the device while talking on the phone, for example. A royal pain when it's the same device! > Yea, I agree. OTOH, back at college around 10+ years ago, I ended up feeling so chained down by all the crap I was carrying around everywhere (I was still a total tech geek at the time), that I had a "fuck this shit" moment, and permanently left my books at the dorm, my wristwatch in my pocket, and generally came to appreciate minimizing the amount of "stuff". But of course, a modern dedicated camera + flipphone + PDA/smartphone would probably take up less total space than *just* the music player alone that I had been carrying around at the time (An MP3 CD player - just shortly before the HDD MP3 players started showing up.) > > > They do, like you say, soak up ridiculous amounts of battery power too. Especially Androids. > > Really? I didn't find my Android significantly worse in battery usage than my old iPod (and that was an *iPod*, not an iPhone). Or maybe both are equally bad. :-P > *shrug* Maybe it was just the Nexus S. And I did always have WiFi enabled on that since the cellular service was only connected to the iPhone. > Yeah ever since my wife got an iPhone, our attempts to fall asleep have been constantly interrupted by annoying dings and zings every so often from stray emails, notifications, Yup. >people sending text messages > in the middle of the night for no good reason, etc.. > Call me a disgruntled die-hard IM fan, but I always got annoyed at people who took issue with odd-hour SMS. Whether GAIM, Outlook, or SMS, if you don't want incoming messages interrupting you, then *turn the damn speakers off*. Makes no damn sense to leave it on and then bitch about what's obviously going to happen. Of course, these stupid devices will also vibrate and light up and do everything short of spray water and smack you in the face, but really that's just part of a bigger problem: They need to have a proper, convenient, sleep mode anyway. They can call it a "shut the fucking thing up" mode. :) Neither of my Palm devices ever pulled any of that "look at me! look at me!" shit (Well, aside from the alarms that I *deliberately* set, and also twice a year when DST would start/end - but even then it didn't go nearly as multisensory-hyperactive as this iStuff does every time one of your contacts types or farts or whatever...and on iOS the stupid thing does it *twice*...I got so sick of that damn thing *repeating* every fucking SMS I received whenever I chose not to give it the attention it demanded. iOS really makes me miss Apple 2). > We try to make the best of it, though. I set my morning alarm to a rooster call, and she set hers to dogs barking. A hilarious way to wake up. :-P > Heh. If I faced that every morning, both devices would end up launched out the window within the first week ;) > > > And on iOS - well, it *might* be working like a taskbar, but honestly I never could really tell what the hell its semantics were. I was always just *guessing* that it was the list of running programs...which made me wonder why it would (apparently?) keep freaking *everything* I was done using running in the background (at least, as far as I could tell). > > Yeah I could never figure out what was running in the background on my old iPod. And couldn't find a way to manage background tasks either. It would just run slower and slower until a crawl, and then finally just freeze and fail to respond to anything (or run at 1 screen update every 5 minutes -- completely unusable). Then it's time for the two-finger salute -- power + home for 10 seconds to hard-reboot the contraption. > On the iPhones, you can hold the button (uhh, yea, *THE* button) for a couple secs (don't recall if you have to already be on the home screen) and it'll show a taskbar/dock-like thing that's basically equivalent to Android 4's task switcher (except tinier). But like I said, I could never tell whether or not iOS included "recently used but not running" junk in that like Android does. Or if it was even some sort of "suspended apps" thing. Or whatever. It never gave any indication what was going on with them. > After I got all the data and apps I needed on my Android, I retired the iPod and haven't turned back since. > Yea, the only reason I'd ever have an iHipster device at this point would be for cross-platform mobile development. There's plenty I hate about Android even compared to iOS (The VMed systems API, and Google persistently trying to get you to give them all your personal data, as opposed to Apple's native code and "Don't wanna use iCloud? Ok, yea sure, back everything up directly to your own computer then, that's cool with us.") But overall, Android is definitely less irritating, less idiotic (ex: sideways keyboard is accessible *consistently*, user-selectable default apps for various things), and is just overall the lesser of the two evils. > > > They're too damn opaque. > > > > At least Android actually has a decent task manager. It's just too bad you have to dig so far to get to it, which prevents it from being a real taskbar substitute. > > You *could* just move it to your front screen, y'know! ;-) That's what the home button's for. Two clicks to kill off a misbehaving app (of which there are too many, sad to say -- browsers being one of the frequent offenders). > Hmm, I could have sworn that on mine the task manager was simply a somewhat buried *part* of the settings program. I guess it's kinda been awhile though. In any case, that's still not as nice as if the task switcher simply didn't insist on cluttering itself with "recently used" junk that isn't even running. But yea, sticking the task manager on home would have at least been an improvement. > > If I had to, I'd jailbreak it. Seriously, the iPod became significantly easier to use after I jailbroke it Mine was unfortunately a loaner that I was forbidden from jailbreaking, but I don't doubt at all that would have made it far nicer to deal with. (Well, maybe it *is* fortunate, because if it *had* been mine, there were about 20 times I probably would have hurled the thing into the nearest brick wall. I can't begin to tell you how tempting that was.) > -- I could actually > copy files over SSH, for crying out loud! None of that "install > iTunes first, use our poor reinvention of a filesystem interface just > to transfer files, wait 15 minutes for the sync just to transfer a > 50KB file" nonsense. I'm still trying to wrap my brain around the > concept of running a full-fledged OS (which is actually a Unix core > IIRC) only to artificially cripple its functionality so that you can > only use the contemporary equivalent of a 2400-baud dumb terminal > interface on it. > Yea, I couldn't agree more. Syncing with iTunes is obtuse as hell and borderline broken. And I have severe practical and ethical objections to artificial restrictions. > > > Last I heard you do still have to use a Mac to submit to the App Store, and again, you have to use that one particular proprietary toolkit (which also means no D), but at least it's *possible* to make iOS stuff without putting up with OSX. > [...] > > Good luck having D apps accepted by the App Store. I'd be surprised if those dumbfucks in App Store Approvals would even notice. Besides, it seems more likely (and more feasible) that they'd probably just check that it uses the proper Carbon API, or Cocoa or whatever it's called on iOS. (Not that I've ever actually dealt with App Store submission.) > I'm betting on D making it on Android first. That'd be my guess as well. > If we get off our lazy bums and actually > make D work on Android before the ship passes, that is. > :) |
July 08, 2013 Re: Poll: how long have you been into D | ||||
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Posted in reply to 1100110 | On Mon, Jul 08, 2013 at 12:55:57AM -0500, 1100110 wrote: [...] > And I haven't experienced the battery issues mentioned. [...] > The battery will last half a day with my usage. [...] Heh. The original complaint was that I have to charge the device every day. And now you're telling me that charging *twice* a day is not an issue? :-) T -- My program has no bugs! Only unintentional features... |
July 08, 2013 Re: Poll: how long have you been into D | ||||
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On 07/06/2013 08:48 AM, Jonathan M Davis wrote:
> Typing on smartphones is hell. I generally try and avoid it unless I absolutely have to.
I was on a long train journey, I didn't have my laptop ... at the time it seemed the right thing to do :-)
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July 08, 2013 Re: Poll: how long have you been into D | ||||
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Posted in reply to Jonathan M Davis | On Saturday, 6 July 2013 at 06:48:55 UTC, Jonathan M Davis wrote:
> On Saturday, July 06, 2013 08:36:31 Joseph Rushton Wakeling wrote:
>> Typing replies on a smartphone seems to carry a bit of a cost in
>> textual accuracy :-(
>
> Typing on smartphones is hell. I generally try and avoid it unless I
> absolutely have to.
>
> - Jonathan M Davis
I used to think that, but i've really got used to it now. In particular the Intel keyboard is very good for writing normal text (don't know if it's available on non-intel phones). It's still completely useless for writing code, but then that's hardly their core concern!
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July 08, 2013 Re: Poll: how long have you been into D | ||||
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Posted in reply to Jonathan M Davis | On Saturday, 6 July 2013 at 06:48:55 UTC, Jonathan M Davis wrote: > On Saturday, July 06, 2013 08:36:31 Joseph Rushton Wakeling wrote: >> Typing replies on a smartphone seems to carry a bit of a cost in >> textual accuracy :-( > > Typing on smartphones is hell. I generally try and avoid it unless I > absolutely have to. > > - Jonathan M Davis You may want t try messagease : https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.exideas.mekb I really like it and you can get started pretty easily. Still not as handy as a real keyboard, but much more adapted to a touch screen? |
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