"Let's hope the E66 doesnt crash and reboot itself as often as the E65 does."
Isn't that one of the defining features of just about any smartphone you care to name?
@James Anderson:
"Nokia should concentrate thier design efforts on one or two smartphones that more than five people would buy."
Yeah, if they had just a few models then they might be more inclined to finish off the software before moving onto the next one.
I suppose they need to keep their designers busy in order to catch each annual "upgrade" the contract-tards demand, even if a new model does nothing better than the last dozen did.
Do symbian phones still not have automatic key lock or timed profiles as standard? My 3230 of 2005 is, in general, more poorly specified and with worse battery life than it's predecessor, a Sony Ericsson T68i. However, it does at least run TomTom adequately - WITHOUT A MONTHLY SUBSCRIPTION (Nokia can stick AGPS up it's @r5e).
Post: Cr@p, just cr@p
Arnold Lieberman
Cr@p, just cr@p →
Posted Wednesday 30th July 2008 14:29 GMT
In Nokia E66 smartphone
@Graham Wood:
"Let's hope the E66 doesnt crash and reboot itself as often as the E65 does."
Isn't that one of the defining features of just about any smartphone you care to name?
@James Anderson:
"Nokia should concentrate thier design efforts on one or two smartphones that more than five people would buy."
Yeah, if they had just a few models then they might be more inclined to finish off the software before moving onto the next one.
I suppose they need to keep their designers busy in order to catch each annual "upgrade" the contract-tards demand, even if a new model does nothing better than the last dozen did.
Do symbian phones still not have automatic key lock or timed profiles as standard? My 3230 of 2005 is, in general, more poorly specified and with worse battery life than it's predecessor, a Sony Ericsson T68i. However, it does at least run TomTom adequately - WITHOUT A MONTHLY SUBSCRIPTION (Nokia can stick AGPS up it's @r5e).