We also use "R" for a lot of analysis rather than MATLAB.
I was overjoyed when I didn't have to spend $85 on SPSS for my statistics class, but now that I'm graduated what the hell am I doing with R? Nothing. I found the same thing with LaTeX. Using those technologies is great and, really, I don't mind having spent the time learning, but if I were to turn in a pdf of my LaTeX compiled work, I believe my boss just might shoot me.
I'm just curious why the Android OS doesn't get this level of love and affection from the mainstream.. yeah, the G1 isn't as sleek/sexy as the new Palm... just the same, the OS/platform is at least as interesting. Not to mention even more open.
The key is striking the right balance [in the public's eye] between closed and open source. Yes, the G1 is even more open, but is it too open? Also, what language is required to program the G1? I've never heard anything about it aside from ads and comments saying "Open source!!11!" This system leads with its strengths: design, programming, and the Palm name. Google isn't known for their phones. Palm is.
What does this even mean? Are we measuring mobile phones against each based on "vibes" now? And how is doing the same thing on a different device somehow more creative?
I think what was meant is a reference to the developers' [demonstrated] willingness to listen to the community's developers, along with the overall design of the operating system which is drastically different from the massively popular contender: the iPhone. If you read the palm developer website, it appears much friendlier and more open than anything I've seen on the iPhone website.
As for your comment, when phones can do very nearly anything our laptops / netbooks can do, then yes, I would measure a phone based on its "vibe." It's not so much -what- is being done, but how it is done that makes it different.
[Cue the "vibe" jokes]
"By the time they had diminished from 50 to 8, the other dwarves began to suspect "Hungry." -- a Larson cartoon