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Comparing the Freedoms Offered By Maemo and Android

An anonymous reader writes "Maemo 5 and Android have received a lot of publicity lately, despite the former not even shipping yet. Both have become famous partly for using the Linux kernel, but now that we have a choice, how do we pick one? Is the issue as mundane as choosing your favorite desktop distribution, or is there a more significant difference? This article compares the two from an end user and developer perspective, emphasizing root access and ease of sharing code."

3 of 244 comments (clear)

  1. Equally poor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Troll

    No need for the conundrum. Each sucks. You may like rude and crude, so like those that have come before, some will rave and some will rant. Most, by a long way, will never know either.

  2. Re:Freedom of choice is made for you, my friend by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Troll

    oh ffs the stallman-retard argument - "the GUI is better on competitor x than it is on gnu/asshole ... WELL WHY DONT YOU JUST GO AND USE 1970's STYLE PUNCHCARDS THEN???! pROBLem SOLved!!!" FFFS FUCKING RETARD!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! GET A FUCKING LIFE YOU STUPID MORON!!!!!!!

  3. Re:Kind of an interesting metric. by KillerBob · · Score: 0, Troll

    Right now I am torn between the Samsung Moment and the HTC Hero I just hope that we see them get 1.6 and 2.0 updates very soon.

    FWIW, I've got an HTC Dream and am quite happy with it. And one of the main reasons I'm so happy with it is because it's got a fold-out QWERTY keyboard. I couldn't imagine trying to type out text messages or e-mails using an on-screen touch keyboard. Nowhere near efficient enough.

    On the other hand, between the two you've listed, I'd go for the Samsung. Built-in 3.5mm jack is what sells me, but having a d-pad instead of the trackball is also a major plus. My biggest annoyance with the HTC phone is that it uses a single mini-USB connector for everything... charger, headphones/hands free, etc. It doesn't actually have any other input/output ports besides the single mini-USB. That means I can't charge the phone while listening to music on the headphones, or I can't transfer files to/from the computer while listening to music. On the plus side, at least, it does charge directly from the USB on a computer, meaning I don't need to bring the wall wart with me to work in order to charge it. :)

    --
    If you believe everything you read, you'd better not read. - Japanese proverb