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“Every once in a while, a product comes along that changes our perception of how we use technology, and how natural it can feel.” – Marko Ahtisaari (Head of Design, Nokia), June 2011
As we usher in the start of a new calendar year, it is the perfect time to look back and wonder just what might have been. We look back at the highs and lows that we encountered over the past twelve months, and think of the path not taken. It is fitting, then, that perhaps we take one last look at what might have been for a device that could and should have changed the fortunes of a once-great company as well as the smartphone scene all at once.
Eighteen months ago, Nokia announced a smartphone unlike any other it has produced before. It was a proper smartphone, one that looked miles away from previous Nokia phones: it was sleek, modern and simple at the same time. The hardware was pretty modern, too; no underpowered processors with severely limited RAM issues to be seen here. And, it runs on an operating system that Nokia had announced dead months before the phone’s announcement.
This, ladies and gentlemen, is the Nokia N9.
From OSSO to MeeGo
For a detailed account of the history of MeeGo, head on to this brilliant article on Taskumuro, which has accounts from various ex-Nokia employees.
Long before the launch of the N9, in 2005 Nokia had a group of employees who were running a project called Open Source Software Operations (OSSO). Its goal was nothing short of ambitious: to produce a product that would change the world. In 2007 the OSSO team were renamed as Maemo, based on the open-sourced operating system of the same name that the team developed.
However, internal competition within Nokia from the Symbian team which began way back in 2005, brought about speculation inside Nokia that Symbian were deliberately slowing the Maemo team down for fear of Maemo’s success. It was the type of uphill challenges that the Maemo – and later on, MeeGo – team would have to constantly face for the next few years.
In 2010, Nokia and Intel reached an agreement to merge both companies’ open-source projects, Maemo and Mobile Intel (Moblin), into one open-sourced ecosystem called MeeGo. However, the merging of the two projects meant greater red tape, which hindered the progress of the Maemo team, who at the time were already developing its latest Maemo 6 OS – codenamed Harmattan.
Nevertheless, the MeeGo team pulled together, and in June 21, 2011, Nokia announced the N9, the world’s only MeeGo-based consumer smartphone, which runs on a unique instance of MeeGo called MeeGo-Harmattan.
Unfortunately for the N9, by the time it was announced, Nokia’s new CEO Stephen Elop announced a partnership with Microsoft in February that year. Under the agreement, all of Nokia’s mid-range and flagship devices will be running Microsoft’s Windows Phone OS, leaving MeeGo to “project” status for “longer-term market exploration”. Contractual obligations meant that the N9 had to be released, despite the Microsoft alliance, putting it in a unique position as an accessible niche consumer product.
The N9’s Hardware: Many Nokia – and Industry – Firsts
Nokia was very proud of the N9, and for good reason. The Swipe user interface was unlike any other UI in the market, and was very well received by critics. One reason why Swipe UI feels completely different on the N9 was because the N9 was built for the UI. The N9 was the first smartphone to employ a convex-curved glass that seamlessly flowed out of the polycarbonate body, which assists swipe gestures from the edge of the screen.
Also, the N9 was the first smartphone to use polycarbonate for its chassis. Polycarbonate’s properties make it one of the best choices for a smart device: it is more durable than standard plastic and the polymer is coloured through (or colour-inherent). It also has excellent antenna performance, unlike phones made from metal. Today, polycarbonate has made its way into plenty of other smartphones, proving that polycarbonate is no mere marketing gimmick.
The Finnish company is also extremely proud of the industrial design of the N9, which was known inside Nokia as the “Fabula” design language. This is a simple yet extremely difficult to manufacture design, simply because of the body’s tapered ends and seamless transition from polycarbonate to glass screen. The “Fabula” design language has proven to be such a hit among critics and consumers alike, it now lives on as the primary design for all of Nokia’s flagship devices, as can be seen with the Lumia 800, 900 and 920.
At a time when smartphone screen sizes were beginning to grow larger and more unwieldy, Nokia decided that the N9 would be a phone that could comfortably be operated with one hand as it is with both. The N9 sports a 3.9-inch display, which the company believed was the perfect screen size for one-handed usage. Fourteen months later, Apple announced the iPhone 5, featuring a 4-inch screen that the company mentions is the perfect size for use with one hand.
Finally, there is the screen itself. While the N9 did not push pixels like today’s Full HD Android smartphones, it had, at the time, one of the best smartphone displays in the market. There are two key reasons behind this, one of which is Nokia’s ClearBlack Display technology, which features polarizing filters that increases viewing angles as well as greatly improving outdoor usability. In addition, the N9’s screen was also built with no air gaps between the touchscreen and the Gorilla Glass on top, which gives the impression that the icons are “floating” on the display. Pair this technology with a ClearBlack AMOLED display, and you’ll have a screen where black colours are displayed so deeply that at you’ll have a hard time seeing where the screen ends and the bezel begins.
The N9’s Software: Inspiring Gestures on Other Platforms
Despite now being classified as a dead OS, MeeGo not only lives on with community projects such as Mer and Nemo (as well as Sailfish from Finnish startups Jolla Mobile – more on that later), many of the features seen on MeeGo-Harmattan live on today on other platforms.
Take Windows 8, for example. Of course, the Start Screen is more reminiscent of Windows Phone 8′s Live Tiles, but there was one gesture which came straight from MeeGo-Harmattan: while in any app on the Metro Windows 8 UI of the OS, a downward swipe from the top bezel to the bottom will close the app. This “Swipe down to close” gesture remains, for me at least, the most elegant gesture to close an app on any mobile platform – and potential patent lawsuits aside, it is pretty cool to see this gesture incorporated into Windows 8.
The World Gaze app, an experimental app from Nokia’s Beta Labs that was only available on the N9
Naturally, when talking about MeeGo-Harmattan’s gesture-driven UI, it isn’t difficult to draw comparisons with RIM’s upcoming operating system, BlackBerry 10. BB10 remains one of the most intriguing OS releases of this year, despite being close to a year late. Like MeeGo-Harmattan, BB10′s UI is heavily based on gestures. To unlock a BB10 device, users simply swipe up from the bottom bezel (on the N9, it is a double tap to wake the phone, and an edge-to-edge swipe to unlock). More than anything, BB10′s gestures appear to be an evolution to MeeGo-Harmattan’s Swipe UI, and despite initial complaints from Nokia followers, many have since gotten pretty excited over what RIM has to offer at the end of this month.
Glanceability Concept: Devastatingly Effective
When describing the concept of Live Tiles on Windows Phone, Ahtisaari describes a concept that Nokia refers to as “Glanceability”. Live Tiles allow users to keep up to date with the latest notifications without having to interact with the device in any way. Of course, this concept was revealed in an interview during the Stephen Elop era. The glanceability concept stretches further back in time, and can be seen on display even in Nokia’s feature phones of several years ago.
(Image Credit: pikachu @ forum.lowyat.net)
The N9 has an always-on low power screen mode which displays the time as well as phone notifications. Some community developers even managed to add more information to be displayed on the screen, such as weather and battery percentage. In addition, due to the properties of AMOLED screens, this low power screen mode takes up very little energy, and refreshes every few minutes to prevent the pixels from burning in. This low-power screen is the epitome of Nokia’s glanceability concept, and one which is not replicated anywhere else other than on some Symbian smartphones. The simple yet devastatingly effective idea of a low-power mode has since appeared on some Android devices, and may have also inspired Russian company Yota Devices to produce the YotaPhone, an intriguing Android smartphone coming this year that has two screens: a high-resoulution LCD main screen, and a secondary low-power Electronic Paper Display (EPD) which can display all user notifications, calendar entries as well as for use in apps, should developers support it.
The Big Picture: Nokia and Windows Phone
Nevertheless, Nokia has gone on a path of no return with its alliance with Microsoft. Looking back, the big-money deal definitely looks one-sided, and pushed the Finnish company to the brink of bankruptcy. As reported by TechCrunch, Nokia was very well aware of the fact that Windows Phone 7 was a stopgap OS whose devices had no upgrade path to the upcoming Windows Phone 8. Yet, Nokia went ahead with the deal and then prematurely announced that its current revenue-generating OS, Symbian, was to be discontinued in 2016, and the MeeGo efforts to be shelved (key members of the MeeGo team at Nokia left in July 2012, leaving it as good as dead). As a result, none of Nokia’s WP7 devices sold well, even with the deep discounts the Lumia phones were being sold at. Rumours also emerged that in the final quarter of 2011, Nokia sold more N9s than the sales of all Lumia smartphones.
One year on, and Nokia’s WP8 devices have finally seem to catch on with the public. Nokia’s flagship Lumia 920 has been well received by critics, who praised the smartphone’s stunning imaging capabilities and impressive build quality. The Windows Phone 8 platform also seems to have finally caught up with the other big players, though it still has its fair share of hiccups. Hence, the question remains: is Windows Phone 8 better than what Nokia’s MeeGo team could have come up with in the span of one year?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dr0sKQ9YEFw
In the space of eight months, the MeeGo-Harmattan platform received three major software updates (although this also showed just how rushed the OS was when it was released), and the user experience after the final PR1.3 update remains among the most delightfully intuitive on any mobile device, despite the chip architecture that is now three years old. Hence the above question is as tantalising as it gets for anyone who follows Nokia.
Looking Forward
As an owner of an N9 myself, it is becoming perfectly clear that while there is incredible community support for applications (there was a software update for a Twitter client just last week), and developers continuing to experiment with the UI, the hardware is becoming increasingly dated. The days when I would pick up the N9 just to double tap and swipe around the homescreens for no apparent reason will soon end. The question that many N9 owners like myself are probably asking is, what next?
One solution could be the YotaPhone. It is certainly an interesting concept: an Android smartphone with a low-power e-ink screen and has Swipe-like gestures? It solves the apps issue that has plagued the platform and the hardware issue in one blow. On the other hand, BlackBerry 10 is another appealing avenue: it has another gesture-based UI that looks like an evolved version of Swipe, plus BlackBerry World has compatibility with Android apps.
(Image Credit: AllBoutN9)
However, the obvious choice would probably be Finnish startups Jolla Mobile. Founded and staffed by former Nokia MeeGo employees as well as some community developers, the company is building on the work done by the MeeGo spin-offs Mer and Nemo, and built an entirely new UI on top (Swipe UI remains Nokia’s intellectual property). In November, Jolla heralded the first public appearance of its MeeGo-based Sailfish OS and the company’s UI called Jolla UI. An announcement over its first device is expected to be released this quarter, with a view for a Q2 launch. Interestingly, Jolla will be producing its own Jolla-branded smartphones as well as licensing its OS in an effort to boost the fledgling ecosystem, despite the OS also being compatible with Android apps.
In his review, Vlad Savov of The Verge likened the N9 to an Italian supercar. To a certain extent, he was right: at times when the N9 worked, it was breathtaking; at others, the aging hardware can cause the OS to crash under heavy load. Personally, I feel the N9 is like our first car: it is a unique love affair between man and machine. It may not be the best car in the world, but it evokes a sense of excitement for the owner seeing it on the driveway that makes the him want to take it out for a spin. It is for that reason why the N9 is probably the most underrated smartphone ever made.
The latest addition to Lowyat.NET's family is a freshly-converted tech geek and footie fanatic who dabbles with the occasional game or two.
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The Nokia N9: Is This the World’s Most Underrated Smartphone?
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Superb article on N9, worth the time spent… Good job!
The N9 UI is the best around all OS, so far non of others can beat the N9 SWIPE UI.
Well written! Thumbs up!
quality article! keep coming on! I love N9!
Great job on this N9′s article. You should get some intensives from Nokia.
Great read. nokia would have been doing so much better if that Elop CEO didn’t appear.
Indeed Nokia N9 is the most under-rated smartphone in the market. It is infact the best smartphone in the market.
I’m a Nokia N9 owner and fan. It maybe a dated phone but it still beats most of the newer Android phones and still impressed iPhone users.
It even can double boot into android!
Btw, great article to remind Stephen Elop that he miss a good boat!
hello.
this is 2013 or 2011??
wtf???? move forward ppl. move forward.
High quality article. Well written! Just the facts that people should know.
Proud owner of N9 here
Yo Friend,
We are moving forward with N9. Only others are catching up. If you actually follow the phone is trend you’ll notice that RIM latest OS is full gesture type like N9, Ubuntu phone is also similar. Jolla Sailfish also. If you look at Win 8, guess where their UK come from?
So, pls don’t wtf us. N9 and meego is the pioneer of many things you maybe using in your current or future phone.
You should be say “wtf, why I using my exsisting phone? Should have bought N9″
Cheers! BTW, mind your language.
UK=UI
I’m still using it, and I could get any phone I want for free.
The deal breaker is that N9′s hardware is not capable to decode h.264 videos.
Great read, really enjoyed it. And I do agree there is no other phone like N9 it’s once of a kind. I’m still using mine as my daily phone using anything else feels like a downgrade.
There has not been anything even close to the Swipe after it was released. I am sorry if Nokia and Jolla couldn´t agree of using it in JOlla phones. I also wait that after some time (when Nokias and MS´s joint is in the point where Nokia is allowed to do other business too) Nokia will by the whole Jolla back.
Yesterday Canonical revealed Ubuntu phone. Debian + QT/QML + Swipe !!! Harmattan succesor via Canonical ?
Since when N9 is generating Nokia revenue?
great article here, as a proud owner of N9, reading this article makes me think back even more n reflect on my decision to jump into a “dead” OS coz its simply so out of this world back then that i told myself i could love with all the imperfection, nevertheless Lumia series are getting better n better as time passes but the decision to kill off meego would go down as one of Nokia’s most controversial decision in history. say IF meego still remains to day, i’m sure we would see things like Nokia Meego Pureview 808!! XD
I used Nokia N9 for about 6 months.
Well, the UI is good looking and easy to use, but to tell the truth, it is slow, and has several critical bugs.
We didn’t have whatsapp. Battery sucked.
Awesome article, N9 is best phone ever, even if I use another phone I intuitively make futile swipes :p
BTW I am a proud owner of N9 still love it!
Great article. Its more than 14 months I am using N9. None other phone has impressed me yet. Even I am wondering what Jolla will brought in the market. But whatever device I am gonna buy this year N9 will remain with me
Great article on the N9. I see so many Malaysian N9 lovers here on the forum but have only seen the N9 once in the wild. Oct ’11, I went round the malls looking for a replacement phone. Ŵent to see new N9. Then went to see the new BB. Went to see the iPhone 4S. Then went straight back and immediately bought the N9. The N9 made the others so uninteresting. 6 month down, gave my Magenta N9 to the missus. And bought myself a Black 64Gb. Hehe. Outdated? Not quite yet. Thanks for the giving us this article, Tun Yau!
I love the Nokia N9!
Great article. Hope that some people can bring the Swipe UI back to life in the near future.
> Swipe UI remains Nokia’s intellectual property
Are you saying they support organized crime, and you think that’s just normal any OK??
What the FLYINGSPAGHETTIMONSTER??
Imaginary property = artificial scarcity + a monopoly + a protection racket = major crime + major crime + major crime.
And you just showed that you are OK with that. Harming and insulting all creative people on the planet *ever*.
FLYINGSPAGHETTIMONSTER you. You disgust me. I wish you pain and suffering that you brought upon yourself! Go die in a hole.
Editors Note: Now now… Watch your language
Nokia N9 is definitely my best choice
Would not change to any other phone after using the N9. Andriod just doesn’t feel so user friendly compare to Meego
Hope Jolla will come out soon and we can use it on N9! The community supported a lot of apps and Wazapp(Whatsapp on N9) is a good example 
I love my N9….
nice article.makes me wanna try meego after years with android.
Palm website Imo had the best ui and multitasking… Nokia was following..
as usual, nokia fanboy are super defensive.
lol
wtf, 28 replies,i’m the only non fanboy. i better get going now.
i think the next article might be 3310 or 3210. facepalm.
dont be a combo breaker, you must praise how much you love this phone.
this is the trend in lowyat.net and forum.
u must not tell the truth!
After reading this, tempted to try the N9. Missed out on the N9 offered for FREE from Digi a few weeks back, the N9 was sold out just one day after the offer started on Digi’s website.
I actually agree with you on the bugs, but if I may ask, may I know when did you use the phone? PR1.3 fixed many of the bugs, as well as improved overall performance (of course, still nowhere near the performance of today’s dual and quad-core world). Also, community tweaks such as FasterN9 and N9QTweak were very powerful tools as well. And, there’s been a community port of the messaging service you mentioned for the past six months or so.
The N9 was certainly good, but certainly not the best (that may be where the charm lies). If Nokia had stuck to its guns and continued its work on MeeGo, they might very well have created something of similar impact to 2007′s iPhone.
Thank you! I recognize your handle from your comments on the GSMarena N9 page – you’ve definitely helped a lot of users there
Your wife might just be the only owner of the Magenta N9 here. I’ve actually not seen any magenta N9 in the wild – though not as rare as the glossy white version!
Many share the same sentiment as you do, but it is very unlikely that it will happen. Swipe UI belongs to Nokia, and for as long as they are going down the Windows Phone path, it is unlikely that Nokia will release the code for it.
Er… Right.
The community is insane. For a platform that has been abandoned, I’ve never seen such dedication. The Maemo forums is still buzzing.
…And wazapp is the community’s big secret
I was there on the day of the launch, spoke to some of the staff, and was told that many came and bought the N9 on the 24th. That was pretty unfair for those who came away disappointed on the 25th, the actual day of the promo.
Great article Pang!! N9 was definitely one of the best phones in the past
BB10 is webOS wakeup!!
webOS is the firts cellphone with gestures and multitasking
Great Article. Nokia should be ashamed of themselves for killing “The Goose that laid golden eggs” in favour of “The wolf in sheeps clothing”.
as usual, when you make a deal with M$, prepare to become dust on some stripper’s back.
remember corel linux?
hi,
Wake up Jolla’s sailfish UI is the Swype UI, improved and extended !
Still N9 user.
The N8 was originally destined to run Maemo.
When i get some extra cash, im going to try an find a white one to go with my black N9.
UI is perfect for me, Sailfish UI doesnt evoke the same passion. I cry a little over what could have been every time i read an article like this. BB10 looks like where im heading next..
I bought an N9 just a few weeks ago, since I got interested in Sailfish OS and Mer – it’s the best phone I’ve owned so far, beautiful design, UI and general experience. Will be good to see Jolla and Mer / Nemo Mobile continue the Maemo/MeeGo tradition this year.
So what?
Most of the concepts used in the SwipeUX are generic & can easily be reused without Nokia having a leg to stand on with regards to claims of “copying”.
Most of the supposed “new concepts” in SwipeUX came from WebOS & other platforms.
It was the way it it was all tied together so neatly/consistently that made it “feel” so great overall.
Sailfish(Jolla) can achieve that too, whilst bringing many new unique or borrowed UX paradigms.
Swipe not Swype, the latter is a virtual keyboard, Nokia always referred to it as Swipe or SwipeUX
They’ve made it very clear that they’re not supporting the N9, nor should they have to, that’s Nokia’s problem.
Buy their phone if you want to use Jolla’s flavor of Sailfish…
They’ll make it as easy as possible (within reason) for the community to port Sailfish (probably not their flavor) to the N9.
But it’s unlikely that it’ll ever run 100% perfectly, as some of the lowest lvl sw is & remains closed.
Fantastic article well done . I hope Nokia would again take in the Jolla team and start manufacturing N9 .
Great article and a very good read
I’m an N9 owner and still find no phones on the market that makes me want to replace the N9.
The swipe UI makes Android look old and outdated…
I honestly think that if Nokia had stuck with Maemo/Meego and Symbian that they would be doing better than the currently are.
The N9 is a great phone that some very interesting ideas. I never owned one myself as no microSD card and no user replaceable battery, along with a mediocre camera put me off. Still it looked fantastic.
If Nokia had spent the last year and a half improving the above two OSes, both of which despite things have significantly improved anyway; rather than treading water with WP7 and wasting time redoing lots of thongs for WP, I think they would have been better off.
N9 under-rated? Please, it has to go down in the history as the best hyped Nokia smartphone ever.
Yes, the swiping UI is fresh and so thats it about it. What else is new? The hardware is dated during its launching, and it was merely saved by its elegent and unique manufacturing process.
I was so disappointed with it when I tested it at a Nokia Rangers event. Wanna know what they did to impress me? Throw their N9 on desk, floor and I have to say I’m damn impressed with that. Looking back, I understand why they did that because its so bad until you feel like smashing it.
I bought my Nokia N9 a year ago, notwithstanding all kinds of snide and sarcastic remarks and reviews. It turned out to be one of the best decisions of my life. People say: “Nokia N9 ? Poor applications, dead operation system, blah, blah…”
All this evaporates once you begin playing with the toy. It is the simplest, sexiest and most user friendly phone. Period…
All my friends have iPhones and Samsung Galaxy S II or IIIs. They paid a fortune to buy them. Nonsense !
I am not interested in billions of “fart-apps” or silly games !
What I need is a ligtning fast, stable, reliable, sturdy, user-friendly smartphone with all the high quality applications and social networks built in.
Moreover, Nokia N9 has a lovely “swipe” action. No other smartphone has it.
It is a pure joy to use this phone. You can easily customise it too.
All in all, I’m a satisfied customer and I wholeheartedly recommend it.
Don’t be distracted by what others say. Follow your heart
You won’t regret it at all…
There was a reason why the N9 is, as you say, the best hyped Nokia smartphone: it deserved it. Not because the N9 was the best phone in the world, but because of the fresh and brave approach that Nokia was heading with the N9 and the MeeGo platform.
More than anything, the N9 shows the potential that can the MeeGo platform can achieve. It was no surprise that many inside Nokia believed that the N9 was the iPhone moment for Nokia.
The white N9 is one of the rarest consumer smartphones out there. I’m not even sure if it made it to Asia.
If you find one, I salute you
Agreed. Just like Android on the N9, Sailfish on the N9 will not be optimized, and is bound to contain bugs.
never played around with the n9, but everything you’ve described sound like webos. down to the dead OS..
nokia.. plz die already..
Proud owner of a black N9 and awesome community that still supports and provide awesome useful apps. There were FREE N9 given out? Oh man, if I knew that I would have gone and gotten a couple more, this is one of the greatest hp + software combo that Nokia had created but too bad, they abandon it before it was born. Agreed that it does not have the best of everything, but back when it was launched, it was a gem as it does not need quadcore + 5″ screen with mega battery to wow its audiences. Now definitely dated but for those not chasing after the latest and greatest app, this plucky ‘abandoned step child’ of a smartphone can still reckon on for a couple more years!!!
I really agreed with all of you, when the time i saw n9 advertisment …i straight away book this lovely phone. It was very-very elegant phone for ever. Beside the UI or hardware, i really love this phone. Even im using ip4, S3 it does not same as n9. Nokia suppose look back on their strategies , as you guys have done best effort on it, WHY it become DEAD……bear in mind, you still got million of followers outside which still hope on you. DO SOMTHING!!!!!!
yes ,we have whatsapp with all updates
I still have my white n9. Although I am using iPhone 5 now (just because of better camera, more apps & sync I need), I must admit that N9 is a love affair.
One of sexiest and sleekest phone around. Brilliant.
For wht nokia did to the N9, thy shud go down the drain …
N9 was filled with so much of potential, but alas it was abandoned by Nokia just like that…
The N9… its like an Alfa Romeo. It always breaks at some point but you forgive it for the pleasure it delivers when you look and drive one.
I have N9 and Samsung too but the Nokia N9 is the best its even better than the I phone but regarding the rumor of N9 Mini i loved it hope its true,
Best to Nokia,
if you have one… you are happy and can’t let it go!!
if you don’t have one… you get impressed, amazed, and then slight jealously
Say what you guys wanna say but N9 is one of Nokia’s breakthrough in history and one of it’s biggest mistake of letting it slip. N9 is one of the most beautiful in terms of design and it’s all swype. The author of this article is right… N9 marks the beginning of Lumia phones it’s design has been adopted even in their current flagship unit Nokia Lumia 920. Go N9!
Proud Nokia N9 Owner
I’ve just bought the N9 yesterday, and I’m so impressed, it has everything I need, it’s pure and simple, I love it! It’s 2 years old but the MeeGo OS design outperform iOS and Android, and I won’t write about windows phone 8 because it’s a waste of time…
Nokia has failed a lot, they didn’t trust and belive MeeGo programers, so this was a big mistake, I belive if they would not quit the MeeGo program today they will be side by side with android and iOS, but with windows they fall even lower!!! What a shame for MeeGo and such a potential… Nokia where do you have eyes? :O
I have N9 is it possible to add in some application into store such as Wechat & Viber in order to access to other different os phone system.
Ok, I can’t take it anymore. Going to get me a N9!
Have wanted one ever since but never actually got it. Thanks for reminding me of the awesomeness that is the Nokia N9. Truly great article!
Bought an N9 64GB and thought it was amazing, and I still think the OS is very hard to beat. The issue is that the hardware on which it was built hasn’t kept up to speed, and while I love the device, its shortcomings are more and more obvious. I moved to a Lumia 920 because it retained the hardware look and feel, but was a whole lot faster, and the Windows Phone 8 UI actually does work. Do I miss Swipe? Yes. Sadly I’ve had to get the 920 fixed due to damage and have had to revert back to the N9, and by love affair was irretrievably broken. While the OS is lovely, it is slow to do anything now, being two year old hardware and using it online like I did my 920 was a terrible experience.
I really hope that we will see Swipe UI properly revived and restored by Nokia. It is a fantastic way to interact with a phone, but I am not hopeful. If only there had been an N10 with 920 hardware. I think it would have been unbeatable.