...just give it to Aza... Is a win-win situation: Aza gets a phone, and you pay the double for a new thing that does exactly the same...Calypto wrote:I can't wait for the next iPhone, I'll probably throw out my old one when it comes out

...just give it to Aza... Is a win-win situation: Aza gets a phone, and you pay the double for a new thing that does exactly the same...Calypto wrote:I can't wait for the next iPhone, I'll probably throw out my old one when it comes out
When I'm getting my phone free with my contract, I can't really complainAzarael wrote:Face it, Apple devices are not value for money.
It looks like a cool phone, but I'd prefer one that had buttons. Having to navigate using gestures seems inefficient.Pinky wrote:Meego is dead since Nokia stopped the entire support about a year ago. The Jolla is powered by Sailfish, created by Meego developers who left Nokia after its switch to WP. They will soon also release a launcher for Android phones so that non-Sailfish users can experience the swipe-based UI.Izumo wrote:Meego
"Free"... of course.... the mobile companies in UK are so moronic that they give i phones for Free...iRobot wrote:When I'm getting my phone free with my contract, I can't really complain
On the contrary, swiping gestures are really intuitive and once you get used to them, you'll curse the guy who invented the home and backward keys. Basically, with the swipe-UI on the Jolla your home button is wherever you have one of your fingers on the screen. You want to go back to the previous screen? All you have to to is swipe to the right from any location on the screen. You don't have to move your finger all the way to the bottom to access the back-key. If you go to either side of the screen and swipe, you move the current app into the background. If you don't move your finger too far of screen's edge, your current app will just get transparent and you can see what's currently happening on your main screen (status of other running apps, connection status, time... etc.). Swiping downwards or upwards (wherever your finger currently is), will open a pull up (or pull down) menu allowing you to quickly access the settings or options of your foreground app. Swiping down from the top will close your current foreground app, while swiping up from the bottom will open the event screen which shows you a a summary of everything you have missed (phone calls, SMS, e-mails, and other notifications).reload wrote:It looks like a cool phone, but I'd prefer one that had buttons. Having to navigate using gestures seems inefficient.
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