With a bit of hands on experience with the most recent generation of mobile phones (or smartphones, I guess I should say; iPhone/iPod touch, E71/S60, X1/Windows mobile), I noticed that it is more and more the platform that dictates what and how the phone does things.
E.g. my rant about the X1/Windows not being able to handle an alarm like every other phone on this planet.
Or that with some functions I feel that the E71/S60 is - as a phone - way behind my previous Nokia 6233/S40: Can't schedule a call on the S60, I could on the S40 (which is supposed to be inferior).
I haven't had any experience with the G1/Android so far, but from what I saw with those other phones, it will most probably be the same:
Function Follows Platform.
The (downward) stack now dictates the (upward) user experience.
As much as I like open platforms with easy and open developer access and app distribution, I hate what it sometimes does to user experience.
Sad, somehow.
Showing posts with label opensource. Show all posts
Showing posts with label opensource. Show all posts
Sunday, January 25, 2009
Tuesday, October 14, 2008
Sunday, October 05, 2008
[TechCrunchIT] Selling the Downturn: Schwartz and the Silver Lining

Selling the Downturn: Schwartz and the Silver Lining
The question now becomes: What insight does Schwartz bring now to the conversation with customers. If they are, as he writes, under stress, and therefore “open to change”, what combination of leading edge hardware and system integration of virtualization will produce immediate results in a climate where Sun’s focus on financial services is likely to be challenged by a wave of mergers, buyouts, and outright collapses. Schwartz and Sun have blazed a trail to the cloud computing enterprise, but now they have to defend themselves against having done perhaps too good a job of turning the market toward the new reality.
Labels:
Gillmor,
opensource,
sun,
techcrunchit
Wednesday, July 11, 2007
IT Conversations: Simon Phipps
Great interview...
IT Conversations: Simon Phipps: "Simon Phipps, Chief Open Source Officer for [Sun Microsystems], joins Phil, Scott, and Ben to discuss Sun's activities. "
IT Conversations: Simon Phipps: "Simon Phipps, Chief Open Source Officer for [Sun Microsystems], joins Phil, Scott, and Ben to discuss Sun's activities. "
Labels:
opensource,
sun
Thursday, June 14, 2007
Enterprise SOA Book
James McGovern challenges the publisher of (co-authored) book Enterprise Service Oriented Architecture:
If I were to convince my publisher to make this available under Creative Commons would folks find this noble or throw daggers? Maybe I should put my money where my mouth is and make a strong commitment. If 50 bloggers trackback to this blog entry, I will ensure this happens by August 1st.This is something to support - creative commons at work...
So here's the link... (count++)
Enterprise Architecture: Thought Leadership: Links for 2007-06-14
Labels:
book,
creativecommons,
opensource,
SOA
Monday, March 19, 2007
Scott Rosenberg: Dreaming in Code
Dreaming in Code
Excellent book; a must (just like Joel Spolsky's writings) for everyone responsible for SW development.
Frankly, I sometimes had the feeling he was not too sure about how familiar his (intended) audience is about development.
But boy, it does good to be reminded of Brooks again (and again).
Labels:
book,
opensource
Sunday, February 18, 2007
Scott Rosenberg: Dreaming in Code
Scott Mace with David Rosenberg about his new book
Dreaming in Code about the software development of the Chandler project.
Seems to be a good reading; I'm gonna buy it and probably report on it.
There is also a website with it.
Labels:
book,
opensource,
software
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