It’s not what you say, but how you say it.
I really love this attention to the detail. You wouldn’t believe that it’s Nokia who designed this phone.
Mer was an attempt to further develop Maemo fully in the open and was cancelled, when MeeGo seemed to be the next big thing. Now that Android, Symbian, Maemo, MeeGo, et al proved to be too easy to burn (I love that phrase), or—in the case of Android—too closed, maybe a resurrected Mer can be the independent platform, everybody’s longing for? At least, it doesn’t look as halfhearted as CordiaHD.
(Source: blog.rburchell.com)
And so it begins …
(Source: Engadget)
“ In Finland, it is a good idea to build some extra platforms before winter so you can later burn them for warmth. #Meltemi ”
Trying to get Skype video calling running on the Galaxy Tab of my mother-in-law, it took me multiple hours to get the fucking Samsung “Kies” software running on my Mac, which is needed for the Gingerbread update, which in turn is needed for video calling.
This endeavor included—but was not limited to—funny stuff like:
The update then took about two hours(!), and finished (after telling me that it was unable to pull the videos that have been on the device through) with a nice and clean Android 2.2.1 installation.
That’s right, folks: FroYo. The software didn’t even bother to tell me beforehand that I’m wasting my time with this shit, and that the last nine months did in fact not suffice for Samsung to offer an upgrade to Gingerbread for the Wi-Fi models of the Galaxy Tab. I guess, I should have known this from the firmware version I upgraded to: PDA:KM2 / CSC:KM2 (DBT). Clearly Android 2.2.1. So, no video calling.
This is why people buy Apple products.
Ich habe heute endlich mal die Zeit gefunden, das Videomaterial von meinem Fallschirmsprung zusammenzuschneiden und mit lizenzierter Musik (danke, Eleventh Sun!) zu unterlegen. Es kribbelt immer noch beim anschauen. \o/