Issue #2: Why Jolla deserved to fail
[Edit: removed two edits posted afterwards, was an unimportant sidetrack]
In my opinion there is a big enough market for people who want a phone which is neither collecting as much data as possible (Android) nor locked down & censored (iPhone). Also important: openess, 'standard linux distribution' and nice design. I would be ready to pay between 50 and 100 € yearly to a company which provides and takes care of such a phone/software. Personally I don't need fancy hardware, but others might, thus there needs to be choices.
I hoped Jolla could be this, but
open source: it was 'mis-marketed' in the begining, and the more I think about it, the less I see a way for a company to enter the smartphone business without being open source incl. UI. Nobody can fight against Google, Apple or Microsoft without much grassroot help and this will never be given without being open source.
chase the wrong goals: once there was angry birds... recently this UI update to mixed results... several website updates... Was this money well spent? On the other hand important things for people which I suppose buy such a phone have been neglected: email, contacts, calendar, foto, synchronization, encryption, toh...
business model & money & management: I loved the beautiful films, the tablet one was particularly gorgeous. But I always wondered about your business model. I cannot imagine that Sailfish on Intex could (at this time) become mainstream and 'print money'. How would you e.g. fight cheap android/windows phones which might even carry 'free' goodies? Why would Intex go with SF and not with e.g. Cyanogen? Shouldn't you rather address people as mentioned on top of this post who are prepared to support an alternative phone? - I don't mind tablet delays due to displays etc. but I wonder a bit about the software side. Shouldn't one be able to plan more accurately? (But maybe not and I can accept that projects are more difficult than thought or even fail). Shouldn't you have been a bit more frugal with your investment money?
communication: terrible! Maybe you wanted too much with together, people powered, irc meetings, twitter, blog. With time noncommittal 'cool aid' overtook for me the 'we take you serious and are honest'. I'd like to mention that again and again developers showed up on together and provided advise, great!
open development: why isn't all/most code on github where people can post issues and provide PRs. Together feels like a mess. Look at gitlab how they engage with the community and get a tremendous amount of features back (but then they have an easier business model and code is fully open source). I say this b/c I perceive the progress of e.g. calendar, email as very slow and you would have had, maybe still have, a community who could help.
Delusion: I have read: "It's not the delays, it's that the world is slow" [to discover Sailfish OS as an alternative option to Android and iOS]. Sorry? - For me, it's the opposite: JOLLA is slow to find a business model that could work, JOLLA is slow to address the points that many have raised long ago. I recommended JOLLA to others but only very very cautiously, because (overgeneralised): for people who like android/iphone it doesn't 'just work' and too many features are missing. For people who want alternatives it is not open-source enough. For aesthetician the phone lost some charm with the last ui update.
I suppose it is just REALLY difficult. If you open source then others can take away almost everything (except branding). If you don't, you loose. Ubuntu and Plasma Phone have rich investors which - if I'm not wrong - don't need a quick return and are partly 'create-a-better-world' driven.
I hope you find a way!! Despite my maybe harsh critic, I'm happy that there are companies like yours and I won't stop give you support (well, I don't need a new phone, my two jollas work still fine and hopefully will for the next two years, but I'd give support as mentioned on top of this post if you ask for it).
This said, I'm also pragmatic and - I suppose - in about two years the Ubuntu and the Plasma Mobile phone will be reasonably good too and I don't see how you could be an alternative to me then without also being open.
Very harsh title but a lot of valid points in the text.I wish I could argue with this post but I have to agree at least for the most part.
lispy ( 2015-11-30 16:10:45 +0200 )editThey didn't fail yet (well actually they did, but there is still hope they get saved) but I have to agree with you. Jolla didn't seem to target its own community, i mean do you really care for angry birds? Do you think that ambiences are a 'killer'-feature? And on top of that there is still no paid app support I mean thats the first thing you need if you don't want to go fully open.
michel ( 2015-11-30 16:10:57 +0200 )edit@michel Paid apps could have helped to get more apps ported and make it easier for average user to switch to SFOS, but it could also instead of native ports, have flooded the Store with existing Android versions of those apps with pricetag because "why wouldn't you sell your app on as many stores as you can?".
avhakola ( 2015-11-30 16:35:08 +0200 )editthats not really a problem is it? I mean Jolla allows android apps in their own store for a reason. And the apps that end up there are at least garanteed to work flawlessly on SFOS
michel ( 2015-11-30 16:42:10 +0200 )edit@lipy: I second that - while the title indeed sounds harsh the actual piece is a really good summary of the issues we are having right now. Lets hope its not too late yet to apply lessons and change the course...
MartinK ( 2015-11-30 16:48:20 +0200 )edit