The system is still extremely buggy. It closes in mid-writing-a-text message or mid-call. You expect this behaviour from a toy, but not a phone.
Mind you, to people in emerging markets, it is a tool, not a toy, even if they only pay $25 for it. To these people, it's a lot of money.
The hardware is very slow. It is too slow to render HTML5, which is especially hard when you have to type on the touch screen. The problem is that the system lags quite long after you touch the screen, so you are a few letters ahead of what is on the screen. There is no feedback.
So, to me, Mozilla is really disconnected from reality if they think this could work.
I love what Mozilla is doing and I'm tempted to move everything possible to Mozilla.
I love the idea of ruthlessly developing for low end systems rather than just assuming everyone has 1 GHz and 1GB.
I hope designers and coders enjoy the challenge of working with such limited systems.
I tried to use Paypal website on an iPhone 4 yesterday. It was painfully slow. It was loading a bunch o stuff that I just didn't need or want. Horrible experience.
It is slow and the touchscreen is poor. The OS build that it shipped with wasn't very good, and updates have been slow and problematic.
But. I've been happily using it as my main phone since I got it in early January, and I expect that to stay true for a fair while. It's not at all 'unusable'. It makes phone calls and sends and receives text messages. It even seems to handle MMS better than my Galaxy Nexus did. It browses the web, although that can take some patience. The Marketplace has few apps, and fewer good ones, but it does my calculations, tells me the weather, helps me find directions when I'm lost, and has numerous Flappy Bird clones.
I think it's amazing that it only took $100 to have something that does all that arrive on my doorstep. Sometimes it's more amazing, though, that the technology around us is so cool that to m[ost|any] people that doesn't feel good enough.
ajarmoniuk|12 years ago
Mind you, to people in emerging markets, it is a tool, not a toy, even if they only pay $25 for it. To these people, it's a lot of money.
The hardware is very slow. It is too slow to render HTML5, which is especially hard when you have to type on the touch screen. The problem is that the system lags quite long after you touch the screen, so you are a few letters ahead of what is on the screen. There is no feedback.
So, to me, Mozilla is really disconnected from reality if they think this could work.
DanBC|12 years ago
I love the idea of ruthlessly developing for low end systems rather than just assuming everyone has 1 GHz and 1GB.
I hope designers and coders enjoy the challenge of working with such limited systems.
I tried to use Paypal website on an iPhone 4 yesterday. It was painfully slow. It was loading a bunch o stuff that I just didn't need or want. Horrible experience.
nickloewen|12 years ago
But. I've been happily using it as my main phone since I got it in early January, and I expect that to stay true for a fair while. It's not at all 'unusable'. It makes phone calls and sends and receives text messages. It even seems to handle MMS better than my Galaxy Nexus did. It browses the web, although that can take some patience. The Marketplace has few apps, and fewer good ones, but it does my calculations, tells me the weather, helps me find directions when I'm lost, and has numerous Flappy Bird clones.
I think it's amazing that it only took $100 to have something that does all that arrive on my doorstep. Sometimes it's more amazing, though, that the technology around us is so cool that to m[ost|any] people that doesn't feel good enough.