answered
2015-05-06 08:43:45 +0200
1) How would you describe the Jolla/Sailfish experience for ordinary users (not developers)?
I would put me in the ordinary user, I'm no developer and anytime I see a complex solution to a problem (especially involving lines of code) then I know I can't fix it. Having said that, I would say the Sailfish/Jolla experience is good - by no means perfect though. I use the Jolla as my everyday phone, and I get by just fine. Through the Android stores I've installed BBC Iplayer, Netflix, Tunein and a handful of other Android games and apps that don't exist in the Jolla store and they all work fine. Where possible, I use a native Jolla app in the (perhaps mistaken) belief that the system runs it more efficiently. That, and if possible, I'd rather use an app developed especially for the system. However, when I use my wife's Lumia 1020, or muck about on a friend's iPhone or whatever, I do notice that the OS is slicker than Sailfish. But, Sailfish is developing fast, and there are regular updates that increase usability all the time.
As for ease-of-use, I find Sailfish a breeze - I have come from the Nokia N9 so am used the a gesture-based OS. In fact, when I use my wife's Lumia, I find myself swiping the scree and feeling annoyed that nothing happens.
2) How important do you think it is for people - particularly in Europe - to embrace a European phone/mobile operating system -- to liberate themselves from Google/Apple?
I think there's an element of importance to this - I don't like how much of life has become digitalised, and how much so many different websites know about us. I've never been particularly active online - a little used Facebook account is all I really have, social media-wise, but even so it's worrying how much of ourselves is available, and how easy it is to uncover online vast swathes of what I would consider private information about people. Thus, I do like Sailfish and Jolla's approach to privacy, and their promises to never sell data etc.
As for the European company, it's nice to see the innovation, and it's also good to see ex-Nokia employees developing something new and fresh. Overall, I think that it's important to have some diversity in the mobile OS world, just to keep things from being dull or stale, and from keeping two companies from holding all the cards. I realise that Sailfish will never be anything more than a small niche, but at least it's something different - and it's great to see an active community play a strong part in the development of an OS, as well as the hardware with which to run the OS.
3) I'm an ordinary user, though able to play around with my computer. Yet I'm having teething problems with some things like CalDav/CardDav (syncing with my Apple laptop). How realistic do you think it is that users depart the comfort of the "golden cage" offered by iOS or Android (with their cloud services) over abstract data concerns as flagged by Edward Snowden?
Users coming from Android or IOS will have a problem adapting, I think, if only because you have to do a little more work to get things running well - finding patches on OpenRepos, for example. And yes, It's possible that people worried about privacy and data might leave IOS/Android/Windows Phone, but I think that it would have to be your biggest concern, as there are other phones (the Blackphone for example) that make a big deal out of privacy, and yet still run Android. However, the longer you stay with an OS, the more invested you are with it, and the harder it is to change. I think that's probably why OS users remain relatively stable. I came from the N9 though, which was being killed off and had bugger all apps anyway, so it's not a hard change to a new OS. However, if I had spent tens/hundreds of pounds on IOS apps would I make the change? Probably not.
Here's the article..
glenf ( 2015-05-15 09:54:15 +0200 )edit