donkiluminate
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- Jan 7, 2013
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While this phone isn't perfect it does seem to be exactly what the platform needs. An exciting flagship phone that has people talking and isn't built by MS.
Way too big for a lot of business people--think road warriors. They use their phones 90% of the time as mobile communication devices and need something that easily fits into a pocket and can be used one handed when dragging luggage through an airport. I'm not sure I see the advantages except in some niche scenarios. If you need to carry around a device that is a fake laptop, why not carry the real thing since there are many that are very small and light and still much more powerful than any phone. That gives you two independent devices, so one is a backup in case the other dies and saves you having to pair the devices, etc. Plus, IT departments aren't wild about the idea of people carrying their computers around with them in the first place, especially when eating out or in a bar after work.
I guess Enterprise Customers are not allowed to express their opinion in this forum than?
Yeah, and I imagine the real world where the "fake laptop" at the airport or Starbucks will be stolen, broken, missing a key or two, with a keyboard covered with old coffee residue, and three people waiting in line to use it. No business person would ever take the chance that the equipment would be there and in working order. They would still have to carrier all the crap to make it work because you never know what you will encounter. Even when visiting high-tech offices I carry spare ethernet cables, HDMI cables, adaptors, a power supply, a mouse, etc. even when carrying a laptop because you can't count on anything being there and in working order when you need it. For that matter, you can't count on the stuff being there in our office building in rooms that are supposed to have the stuff!Imagine a world where the "fake laptop" is already set up at the airport or your local starbucks "with all the fixins" (keyboard mouse charger etc) and all you have to do is plug your phone into this "shell."
This only works if airports and coffee shops actually spend the cash to put these in place. And why would they? For an OS that has a tiny market share?
Don't forgot Motorola tried the 'dock your phone into a dumb laptop' and that didn't work too well.
I had an Atrix with the Lapdock and it was a great concept. Like the Celio Redfly on WinMo before it, it suffered from horrible lag because the client was limited by the host's CPU and RAM. With today's modern hardware, a dumb workstation idea would work a lot better OR having the client include its own RAM the way the Palm Foleo was originally configured.Had one, loved the Lapdock...the OS was its downfall. Have baked, crashed a lot and the prices they asked for them was what killed them. The idea was solid, the accountants ruined it.
As for the camera button, yeah, I use my phone at work all the time for documentation, and the lack of a camera button is a major nuisance.