Review Of Linux-based Motorola A768i
Eugenia writes "MobileBurn published a review of Motorola's A768i, the Linux-based smartphone that employs a PDA-style form factor. It may not have much in the way of photo-taking abilities, but the A768i might be the thing for business users as it excels in the phone/messaging category."
Since when to people use phones for that anymore? ;)
When things get complex, multiply by the complex conjugate.
.. I saw a Motorola Linux phone that really had me drooling - it was just a simple "bar of soap" form-factor, no keys, one big O-LED display on one side of the rectangular black plastic form, and when you hit the On button, the whole thing lit up.
.. he did show me some videos on it, and demo'ed the voice-recognition features, which seemed pretty workable. But, alas, it doesn't look like Motorola are releasing this one too soon .. anyone know of the "bar of soap" Linux phone from Mot?
It was running Linux, only the guy demo'ing it wouldn't really let me play with it too much
; -- the corruption of government starts with its secrets. a truly free people keep no secrets. --
So I tried to RTFA, and I got a 500 error past the first page - so my question is without a numeric keypad, how the heck do you dial the phone? Do you use the stylus - cause that would just be annoying.
I have the A920, a very similar Symbian OS 3G phone from Motorola. It's excellent in terms of design and functionality (a bit low on battery life with the 266MHz CPU in it, but that has been fixed).
For someone like myself who loves and uses gadgets but can't justfy carrying a seperate PDA, MP3 player, cell phone, camera... the smartphone is the only serious choice. Having one that runs linux instead of Symbian can only be an advantage.
I am government man, come from the government. The government has sent me. -- G.I.R.
I'd love to know exactly how well this Linux phone is locked-down to prevent tampering and "copyright abuses", or another way, how easy it will be to write cool hacks for it myself.
Will they release a tool-chain? Will every piece of software have to be certified before use (as most network operators seem to like). Will it be hackable like the Linksys Wireless routers
Am I being naive and engaging in wishful thinking?The phone operators should realise that they could make a lot of money if they were not so damn greedy with their download rates.
Sent from my ASR33 using ASCII
Hmm, primarily because the backbone is not entirely 3G yet.
Besides, 2G definitely has more of a coverage than 3G does.
Hence a lot of continuing investment in 2G networks.
I think.
the A768i might be the thing for business users as it excels in the phone/messaging category
Because no other equipment competes for this niche? Or is it because obviously the only acceptable solution is a Linux solution, and if this is the only Linux option in the niche it's therefore what everyone should be using? I like Linux, use it almost exclusively, but I can't say I'd go for a Linux PDA or phone if, say, a Symbian alternative had better features.
Virtually serving coffee
While I'll grant you that Linux is certainly "...the road less traveled..." for smartphones they didn't even mention PalmOS? I know (and am very disappointed) that there are few enough of them out there, but PalmOS is such a strong player in the PDA market that I can't figure out why there aren't more Palm based phones out there.
"Like fire and fusion, government is a dangerous servant and a terrible master."~RAH
Not necessarily. The fact that it has a camera at all makes it unuseable for me at work (security). Give me an option if I want a camera or not, and adjust the price accordingly. Then we will talk.
By the way, does this look just like a Palm m100 to anyone else?