
agree on the long tail boutique scale apps ... but to revive the embers of a old cagefight can such things be served up through a browser rather than a native app ?

In massaland the Android phones come with tonnes of carrier (and manufacturer) bloatware, that can' be removed without rooting. AT&T used to turn off the WiFi tethering option on all its phones (including iPhunwa I think). Don't know if they still do that. Probably do. Only way to unlock it is to root the phone. Rooting process itself takes about 5 minutes at the most. As for turbo levels, there are methods for overclocking the processor, etc I believe. just like on a PC. But a very small percentage of users would ever need or use it. It'll come with its own pitfalls like overheating and low battery life.Singha wrote: and what exactly are the benefits of "rooting" on android other than wipe off wasteful vendor UI and get back some speed? WP8 is already very speedy and doesnt need such tricks.
there are no secret apps or turbo levels to unlock by rooting is there? people have forgotten the why of it...just like jihadis just tend to get into a frenzy once the mullah unleashes his flock out the gate. any app that runs on a supposedly 'pure' wahabi rooted phone will run just fine on touchwiz or htc sense or any panda skin in the wild .... Google unable to force all android licensees to frequently update their phones is a failing of android. that cannot be a viewed as a +ve for rooting , just a cause-effect to bypass this failing.
It is good you did. May be we should pick up our discussion from where we left off on math dhaga too.SaiK wrote:mat-rim-c garu, i was only trying to understand.
Chromecast also seems useful for phata abduls like me with a non-wifi enabled non-Samsung TV.Suraj wrote:Finally chacha has announced the new Nexus 7. Looking pretty good!
I will go m-academia nuts!matrimc wrote:It is good you did. May be we should pick up our discussion from where we left off on math dhaga too.SaiK wrote:mat-rim-c garu, i was only trying to understand.In the academia counterexamples are always wilcommen.
Typical head in the sand ostrich mentality from the reporter who keep blindly parroting the same line without thinking. GB and Chacha have a conflict of interest when it comes to Location Based Services and mapping and that is the only lifeline GB has to get itself out of the HW onlee manufacturer quagmire which folks like HTC seem doomed to be stuck in. So for GB it didn't make sense to go all in on Android and it had to go all in on one platform whether it was Android, WP or its own (MeeGo) in order to focus and stop the ship from sinking rather than spray and pray. Through lack of proper product management, MeeGo despite being probably the most intuitively designed mobile OS till date never took off as it required a runway much longer than what GB could afford especially in terms of making it a viable ecosystem. That left Android and WP. Chacha refused to allow GB to put its own LBS and mapping on Android while also putting in non-competing Chacha services like Gmail. That left WP and that's what GB decided to focus on.Lilo wrote:BhairavP wrote:Lumia 1020 review:
http://www.theverge.com/2013/7/24/45503 ... 020-review
Raja babu, when are you sending me one?. There are plenty of compelling Windows Phone 8 options, from the gorgeous 925 to the feature-packed 1020, but they can’t change the fact that Windows Phone 8 itself just isn’t that compelling.
Throughout my entire time with the device, I kept coming back to Stephen Elop. He told the Guardian that Nokia picked Windows Phone because it feared Samsung would come to dominate the Android market, and that Nokia wouldn’t be able to compete. I disagree. The 1020, plus all the sharing options and apps that Google’s OS brings, could be a ridiculously compelling phone. I’d happily carry a big phone that gave me a perfect camera, but right now with the 1020 I’m carrying a big phone running a third-place OS just for the imaging prowess. For Nokia’s sake, I hope Windows Phone 8 gets the apps it needs before HTC, Apple, or Samsung wakes up and builds a killer cameraphone to go with a killer ecosystem. But either way, I hope it happens soon – I hear Justin Timberlake’s coming back to New York this fall.
The review (and many others) mention that the 1020's dynamic range is amazing. My question is, relative to what? I understand it blows the iPhone 5 and Galaxy S4 out of the water, but how does it compare to a mid-range P&S like, say, an S110?Raja Bose wrote:Nokia Lumia 1020 Review
Even the most biased fanbois (aka Engadget and TheVerge) are admitting that this type of phunwa makes P&S cameras don Paki jernail uniform. HW commoditization ensures these technologies trickle down in price point and that has never failed till date.
Mortullah tau, aur kitne din tak haqeeqat se ladtay rahogay?
Congrats on that. Typically your neighbourhood Sangeetha/Univercell/any other cellphone dealer will cut the SIM in a jiffy for free - get it done right now and start playing with itSingha wrote:just got the lumia 820 at home. precise, cleanly engineered iphone/HTC type tolerances and casings. heavy. still havent figured out how to remove the back cover...seems to be almost welded shut.
son is jumping up and down wanting his grubby paws on it.
so different from the chipanda/samsung plastic that looks like came from recycled lotas, mugs, buckets and cheap toys.
added later - first roadblock - yikes it needs a micro SIM and our sim's are full size. looks like have to get it changed in weekend
You can find a SIM cutter (normal to Micro-SIM) in any shop. Saves the hassle to wait for a new SIM activation/etc from the operator.Singha wrote:just got the lumia 820 at home. precise, cleanly engineered iphone/HTC type tolerances and casings. heavy. still havent figured out how to remove the back cover...seems to be almost welded shut.
son is jumping up and down wanting his grubby paws on it.
so different from the chipanda/samsung plastic that looks like came from recycled lotas, mugs, buckets and cheap toys.
added later - first roadblock - yikes it needs a micro SIM and our sim's are full size. looks like have to get it changed in weekend
You have to use it and see or wait for dpreview or anand ji to write a more detailed review.Mihir wrote:The review (and many others) mention that the 1020's dynamic range is amazing. My question is, relative to what? I understand it blows the iPhone 5 and Galaxy S4 out of the water, but how does it compare to a mid-range P&S like, say, an S110?Raja Bose wrote:Nokia Lumia 1020 Review
Even the most biased fanbois (aka Engadget and TheVerge) are admitting that this type of phunwa makes P&S cameras don Paki jernail uniform. HW commoditization ensures these technologies trickle down in price point and that has never failed till date.
Mortullah tau, aur kitne din tak haqeeqat se ladtay rahogay?
my whine still standsBhairavP wrote:Singhaji,just get the sim cut,no need for a new one.
Bose babu,my question still stands!
An app for your bank, an app for your utilities provider, popular websites etc etc and all of these in every country. Already in countries where WP has gained significant market share (like UK), more and more such apps are being provided. WP's market share has to increase in other countries to bring such providers on board.prahaar wrote:Singhaji, it is more about the long tail app content that is missing in WP ecosystem rather than any top of the line apps (there are a few notable exceptions like Instagram, and definitely few others). For example, a TV program was asking for audition videos, and had provided an Android and an iOS version of the app, WP was not supported. Niticentral has Android app but does not have a WP app. Similarly there are utility apps (like stock trading tips apps, etc which are not HUGE apps but for a user depending on tips from a certain blogger or a company is tied to the ecosystem by that single app.
The top of the line apps in Android/iOS can/will be encouraged by MS and other ecosystem players to support WP, but the task becomes impossible for long tail app content.
http://www.theverge.com/2013/7/25/45578 ... and-motionramana wrote:RB, Isn't Google's Chromecast like a mini Roku with some enhanced features?
How is the Nokia music service different from Pandora/Spotify etc.? Did you pay for the songs you downloaded or were they free as well (although I don't see how hat could work)?Singha wrote:highly impressed with the 820 nokia so far. had a lot of fun with the free music service and downloaded some hindi and english songs to listen later, huge selection of music incl regional indian languages.
Singha wrote:highly impressed with the 820 nokia so far. had a lot of fun with the free music service and downloaded some hindi and english songs to listen later, huge selection of music incl regional indian languages.
whoever designed the WP8 UI did a good job of it AoA.
the letters on screen are so sharp, just like the ipad they look printed on it.
currently trying to find some excuse to grab the phone for myself and fob wife off with my samsung heh heh. android has become a zoo with 100 apps for every job at hand.