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Having (briefly) owned an N97, I was incredibly dissatisfied to discover that Nokia has tried their hardest to port elements of Symbian phones to the Maemo platform. Once you're previous the (admittedly awesome) desktop effects, the N900 feels disturbingly similar to the N97 when it comes to use. "Mail Not Responding. Quit?" When you use e-mail, you're going to see this message. Using the included Mail application for Trade and an IMAP account is painful, to say the least. In the event you're coming from another Symbian phone, you'll discover that the Mail application is every bit as sluggish and constrained as your old cellphone, but does a (marginally) better job of rendering HTML messages. For those who're coming from something like an iPhone or BlackBerry, neglect about it. Having an iPhone 3G and BlackBerry Daring as properly, the messaging on the N900 is infuriating. The display is attractive, when it comes to resolution. It's trash in terms of accuracy, should you aren't using the included stylus. I don't have big fingers, and yet, almost each tap is both interpreted improper, or not registered at all. Utilizing kinetic scrolling will inevitably open something you did not intend to open, or do nothing at all. You may find yourself asking "Did I tap once or twice?". Web looking? Brilliant. Seriously. The included internet browser is every bit as good as everybody says. Pages render properly, Flash works, zooming in and out is excellent. When you simply wished a handheld internet browser and nothing else, I'd advocate this ten occasions out of ten. "But it runs Linux! Linux, Linux, Linux!" Sure. I think about myself to be fairly platform agnostic on the subject of phones, and albeit, the "open" nature of Maemo is one thing of a red herring. Sure, getting purposes on the N900 that aren't blessed by Nokia is relatively easy. Sure, you can compile OpenOffice to work on the N900. The question actually is: "Will you?". In a number of ways, I can see how the N900 can be an excellent device if I was a Unix / Linux admin who wished the pliability to work wherever and not using a laptop or netbook. And, there is a sure geek credibility that comes with doing one thing for the sake of doing it, especially when you have got such a portable platform. The N900 is nice for these things. And consider, that is largely the viewers that Nokia is concentrating on with the N900. For properly over a decade, Nokia's been identified for rock-stable performance on signal and voice quality. With the N900, once more, they've come short. 3G name quality is decent. For those who're exterior of a 3G area (which is probably going, in case you use this with T-Cell, and a certainty should you're on AT&T), the N900 has a really difficult time sustaining an honest GPRS/EDGE sign, and dropped calls are frequent. Admittedly, the phone functionality is something of an afterthought from Nokia on this specific mannequin -- nevertheless it actually shows. As for carrying it round, the N900 isn't fairly the "brick" some have claimed it to be. It's definitely substantial, compared to different telephones available, though not unreasonable to hold in a pocket. The multimedia functionality is above common, capable of enjoying nearly every type of music and movie format I might throw at it. The digital camera, whereas respectable, is not considerably better than what you'd discover in most midrange to high-end telephones when it comes to image quality. Overall, the N900 is a huge sequence of tradeoffs. For a lot of "it does not do..." there are workarounds, or can be workarounds, or is perhaps workarounds. And that is really the crux of my rating. The hardware, in and of itself, is not very particular for a cellphone that prices this much. And the shortcomings could be addressed, but you must query how much effort and time you're willing to put in to this device simply to carry it at par with equally priced alternatives. On the same time, there's a variety of wishful thinking, for those who aren't prepared to roll up your sleeves and do some improvement work. "Possibly Nokia will address this in a firmware update..." or "Possibly somebody will write a script or program that does this..." will likely be your mantras in case you do not do the work yourself.
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