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Detlef Schmicker has posted to maemo-developers the first results of his hack to use VNCViewer to connect to a locally running Debian instance on the tablet to solve the keyboard/input issues.
He's had Firefox, Gimp and Xterm all running on his N800 in the IceWM window manager, with VNCviewer providing the keyboard. No network connection was necessary.
It's a very cool hack, it'll be interesting to see if it can be packaged for end-user use.
In a comment to Roger at Internet Tablet Talk, Dr. Ari Jaaksi says he'd like to see developed:
[...] an app or service (it doesn’t have to be inside the device, it could be on the network) that demands online, constant access."
This kind of sentiment has been expressed before about the Maemo-based Internet Tablets:
Now it's self-evident that we're not in a world of ubiquitous Internet yet. Norwich city centre's free wifi rollout could be considered a start, as could the talk of a non-free nationwide WiMax network.
So, I look forward to the day of ubiquitous Internet access...
Personally, I doubt the Internet will ever be ubiquitous in these locations without paying a fortune (after all, if an FM radio signal can't be ubiquitous, why would people pay to make a cheap Internet connection available); and why should I have to pay a fortune to check my calendar?
Yes, these are Internet tablets, but I should be able to carry my bits of the Internet around with me.
As rumoured on maemo-developers and ITT, the N800 does have an FM radio... and there's a Nokia application to use it. (Found by Jens Becker: here)
It's in the certified tableteer repository, but it can be installed straight from the deb: fmradio_1.2.0_armel.deb.
Once installed, you have to start fmradio direct from an XTerm, or enable the new "FM Radio" home applet. Headphones are required to act as an aerial, but you can choose to output to the built-in-speakers or the headphones with toolbar buttons.
As koen did for OS 2006, I've unpacked the Nokia-provided tarball of OS 2007 sources and uploaded them: