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The end of the road for the Nexus One

The end of the road for the Nexus One

Posted Jul 22, 2010 6:33 UTC (Thu) by tajyrink (subscriber, #2750)
Parent article: The end of the road for the Nexus One

More greatness to newly found overclocking capabilities in Neo FreeRunner :) If someone still thinks 2(-3) year old hardware is not too old, handheld-linux.com is selling the über version "A7++" of it with _two_ company provided extra hardware fixes.

That said, mass market open phones would be welcome. N900 has potential at least for higher volume continuation device to FreeRunner (though of course not as open on the hardware side), since the only missing part starts to be modem driver which needs porting from ofono to FSO stack and stabilizing: https://elektranox.org/website/debian_on_n900.html


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"mass market open phones"

Posted Jul 22, 2010 12:56 UTC (Thu) by kirkengaard (subscriber, #15022) [Link]

There's a sad little part of me that wonders if this isn't like having a computer in your toaster. People may want a smarter toaster, but they don't want a computer that toasts bread. They want a toaster that works better. The old DWIM paradigm. Appliances have functions, and either work or don't.

Complicating the fact that it's hard to convince the general public that Free/open is something they want from the start may be the fact that a phone, even a smartphone, is merely an appliance. Even with a "long tail" of bells and whistles, its success as a piece of ubiquitous computing boils down to the fact that you can forget it's a computer. It has functions, not software.

That's obviously not to say that Free/open ceases to be a desirable feature, just that the user utility of Free/open has more to do with enabling. The closed ecosystems are good enough at selling their own enabling value without Free/open to make that extra "feature" a harder sell. Free/open becomes a thing for people who remember that it's a computer with software -- until and for as long as it fixes a problem with the appliance.

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