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Comment Re:EDGE... (Score 1) 388

Firstly because of screen size restrictions, even on PDA phones with large screens web browsers are of limited use. Secondly many websites simply become useless when accessed from mobile browsers because they use features these browsers don't support. Admittedly this would be less of a problem if providers of material and services that appeal to the mobile browsing public such as ticket-resellers, news papers, TV stations, various information directories, companies that offer online street-map services, etc... were more aggressive at creating versions of their sites and services optimized for mobile customers. Hell, even the public transport company where I live doesn't offer a website where I can access bus and subway schedules in a format easily readable and searchable from a Mobile browser.
You haven't seen what Nokia's port of WebKit to the Symbian OS can do - the browser on their Series 60 3rd edition phones is freaking awesome. It renders almost anything you can throw at it except for Flash-heavy pages.

The iPhone will be fully integrated into OS X and up to and including the ability to update the firmware which is something no other GSM phone to my knowledge can offer at the moment.
Again, welcome to 2003. Nokia's Series 60 phones have had upgradeable firmware for at least that long. To be honest, the cretins that pass for carriers in the US are responsible for this sort of ignorance. Explore Nokia's N-series and E-series phones to get some idea of the kind of features Apple will be rolling out in the iPhone over the next few years (if at all).

Portables

Submission + - The Palm OS ends with a whimper

PetManimal writes: "Computerworld has reviewed the Palm Treo 755p, the last Palm device with the Palm OS, and concludes that the OS is going out with a whimper, rather than a bang. The article says there are some useful improvements (better integration with Exchange and IM, limited speech recognition, etc.) but 'nothing that will make you sit back and say "wow."' Palm already has at least one device with Windows Mobile (the 700w) and soon will make a big push to Linux devices, maybe by the end of the year. But the Palm OS, which was top dog for a while back in the 1990s, and is still used by many people who own Palm Pilots or Treos, is going to quickly fade, it seems"
Microsoft

Microsoft Cracking Down On Indian Retailers 427

slashthedot writes "Microsoft caught some Indian retailers selling pirated copies of Windows by sending in a dummy customer to ask for a copy of Windows to be installed on their PC. The dealers claim that they are promoting MS software in this way. One retailer said: 'Since we are are not charging anything extra for installing the software, it means that we are actually not trading in pirated software. For us this is just a sewa (selfless act) that we are offering to our customers. Besides, the pricing of their operating systems is way too high for the Indian markets.'"

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