I'm affraid that over here at the INQ; the stuff you compile has always been 'sauce'?
You're obviously newbies?
This is what gives the INQ that rather nice, but very strange and likeable flavo(u)r...
Read it more often, you won't regret it!
Looks like some of the major phone makers are moving away from Symbian. Look how Sony Ericsson now runs Windows in X1 instead of the their usual Symbian OS. X1 marks the future direction that SE is headed.
Symbian, I really hated developing software on that platform.
Symbian was a nice but not great OS, incredibly it's still buggy as hell after all these years and to cap it all it gets saddled with really shit user interfaces from the likes of Nokia and SE.
With SE having made the smart choice to offload Symbian and now about to launch an Android device, what future is there for Symbian other than on the bargain basement low-functionality phones that Nokia sell by the million, but which nobody cares about?
Symbian (and Nokia) lost the high end about 3 years ago, and will never get it back. Period.
Symbian Foundation is on life support, somebody pull the plug.
I'm affraid that over here at the INQ; the stuff you compile has always been 'sauce'?
You're obviously newbies?
This is what gives the INQ that rather nice, but very strange and likeable flavo(u)r...
Read it more often, you won't regret it!
Love,
Dave xxx
If the sauce is open, should it be kept refrigerated and consumed by a "consume-by date" ? Or does it contain preservatives?
Who knew that Symbian would now come in a tomato flavour?
Looks like some of the major phone makers are moving away from Symbian. Look how Sony Ericsson now runs Windows in X1 instead of the their usual Symbian OS. X1 marks the future direction that SE is headed.
Symbian, I really hated developing software on that platform.
Symbian was a nice but not great OS, incredibly it's still buggy as hell after all these years and to cap it all it gets saddled with really shit user interfaces from the likes of Nokia and SE.
With SE having made the smart choice to offload Symbian and now about to launch an Android device, what future is there for Symbian other than on the bargain basement low-functionality phones that Nokia sell by the million, but which nobody cares about?
Symbian (and Nokia) lost the high end about 3 years ago, and will never get it back. Period.
Symbian Foundation is on life support, somebody pull the plug.
This is just very little and extremely late.