
Now that CTIA is over and the Nokia Internet Tablets have the trifecta of device options, it is time to go after the "Average Joe Consumer." There's no time to become complacent.
I love my internet tablets, try to share the joy with others, and support the concept thoroughly. I think OS2008 continues with significant advances and shows improvement with each successive release. With all that in mind, I will say this: There's no way the current tablet software will catch on with the mainstream consumer.
Here's why:
Point One: Compete even without competitors
Internet Tablets are a new class of device that sit between a phone and a laptop. For those who don't read TabletBlog regularly, I call these "secondary devices." Joe Consumer needs be convinced on two points before he would buy an Internet Tablet:
- Yes, I need a device other than a phone or a laptop
- Yes, the Nokia Internet Tablet is that device.

Point Two: User Interface
Too often, I see Joe Consumer or any other member of the Consumer brood pick up an Internet Tablet (either my own or one at a trade show) and look at the home screen. The first reaction: "Now what?" There's a globe, a few people standing around, and scene from Q*bert. I want to set up my Email. What do I do? Compare this to some competitors:

Above is Apple's holy grail. Looking at the face, we see 15 buttons with pretty icons and text labels. The primary features of the device are RIGHT THERE. The single button takes Joe to the home screen always. That's style of user interface is but one option.
Finally, the Asus Eee PC has a tabbed interface of up to 15 applications per tab. While not every item is in an intuitive tab, there are only six tabs from which to choose.The iPhone, Mylo COM2, and Eee PC all have one important thing in common: The primary applications are presented to the Mr. Joe C. right away. There's no hunting for the right application. This is something OS2008 needs if it expects to appeal to Joe.
Point Three: Desktop Harmony
You can bet everyone who buys an Internet Tablet already has a PC. Why is it that there is no desktop software for managing the Internet Tablet? Nokia understands the strength of desktop software but will need to provide comparable software for the Internet Tablets to make them user-friendly enough for consumers. Say Joe gets a new portable device with media playback, Email, and web browsing. He wants to load 80 songs, 10 videos, and 5 podcast subscriptions. He also wants to load in 30 bookmarks and his huge Email contact list. How long would all that take on the Internet Tablet? Too long for Joe!
Point Four: Performance in primary applications
There are four primary purposes for the tablet.
- Web
- GPS
- Chat
Point Five: Earn the "wow" and keep it.
Rating systems on major web sites may give a number of stars, a rating between one and ten, or a count of "thumbs up" and "thumbs down." Real consumers don't work that way. Normal people do not take their phone out of their pocket and call it a 7.2 out of 10. The rating system I personally use is "wow" or "meh." The rating is also fluid: I've had some "wow" devices turn "meh" and vice versa.
The software improvements I mentioned above are the key to keeping "wow." When I load the default media player or chat client, I drop down to "meh" quickly. When a web page stalls in rendering or does not scroll fast enough, I sometimes "meh" out loud. I am forgiving of these instances, but Joe Consumer is not. If Joe Consumer's experience goes from "wow" to "meh" in the first few days, he's taking the device right back to the store. There will be always limitations to every product - but make sure those limitations are not met in the normal and intended course of using the device.
Conclusion
Before I get hate-mail from many of my readers and friends, I know what you're thinking. For the last 2.5 years, I have been an outspoken fan of the tablets - writing one hack, editorial, link, or how-to after another to help people get the most out of their tablets. I have recently had a number of conversations (mostly in Vegas, Dallas and Brazil - thanks!) that helped me gain some more perspective. I still love the tablets but cannot look at them through rose-colored glasses anymore. The next step is at hand: This technology is ready for the normal consumer. The hardware, design, price-vs-feature options, and engineering are all sufficient to break away from the "geek market." The software, on the other hand, needs to play catch-up if it expects to hold Joe Consumer's interest.
This editorial is a fluid work. Things will change and comments made by readers like you shape the opinions stated above. Keep your comments flowing.

45 comments:
Couldn't agree more. I love my N800 and dearly want an N810, but considering I work in a large IT department, with close family/friend in other IT roles, I would only recommend the platform to one other person. Maybe two at a pinch. My father wanted to replace his aging iPaq - I recommended a HTC windows mobile device which he is very happy with.
Come on Nokia, this could be so much more!
You are 100% right, point after point. From this, do you infer that i am not a Nokia employee ?-)
In addition to the improved GPS support you mention, the main thing that keeps me less excited about the N810 is the lack of hardware Vorbis support. Not that Joe Consumer cares about Vorbis but it is important to me.
Wow. You managed to write almost all my opinions on this. Incidentally, I've got an N810 for trialling, and am in the process of writing reviews based on the question "Is it a consumer-friendly device?". Now almost everything you mentioned here, not only I agree with, but should have gone in my last post on the N810. Gotta change my plan now! Anyway, I'll link to this in a few hours. It's definitely worth a read to anyone even remotely interested in tablets.
heh, love the file name of the iphone photo ;)
and yes, i can agree with the points.
right now i have used simplelauncher to put a load of apps onto the "desktop", and personal menu to replace the default "contacts" menu.
as for the "sync" thing between desktop and tablet. i suspect nokia could go the way of opera and provide a "my tablet" service. as in, a place to store your settings and similar online. hell, give it a nice api so that other web services could tie into it.
Great points, I think it would be great if Nokia can somehow create a OS with 2 different UI's. The UI they currently have for the Unix crowd, and then a UI for the "iPhone" crowd.
Liked the "evil-phone.jpg" aswell.
Very well said. I recently picked up an N800 - but I'm having a hard time justifying keeping it. If I am at home, I use a laptop, if I am at work I have a PC, and if I'm on the road I use my phone. Is it meant to be used on the road? My Windows Mobile does pretty well in that arena.
I see a lot of promise but agreed - Nokia needs to work on it, and soon!
Two thoughts:
(1) The NIT is diverse; its primary functions vary from person to person.
One person might play games, browse, and do email. Another might use it for Xournal and VoIP. For someone else, it might just be their home control Orbiter (or that cool Hava remote you posted about earlier).
(2) I get the impression that the current set of NIT owners are smarter than the average iPhone user and *prefer* to fiddle and customize. A simplified main interface might make it an easier device for the masses to warm up to but it may also repel its current fans.
That doesn't mean Nokia or 3rd party developers should not put effort into simplifying the interface, so long as they keep the option open.
Actually, ThoughtFix, that might be a good idea for a poll. Let's find out if most people want a simplified interface with a defined primary purpose set or one that allows diversity, customization and geek-friendly complexity.
Spot on... I picked up a n810 and used it for a month before becoming infuriated with the software, Nokia, and the community ( to a lesser extent ). There is so much potential here that goes wasted.
Lets just hope there is enough time for Nokia to turn this train wreck around before the NIT's become a footnote in the tablet history books.
i agree almost 100% w/the posting - my wife has the "evil" one... and i have to admit it is very tempting to use it - until i want to do something with it - like pair to my phone.. then i remember why i bought it over the touch..there is obviously a need for an almost laptop the first one that combines the NIT with an "evil" interface will make $$$$$
OS2008 may have a little bit higher learning curve, because the initial screen does not push all possible application into the users face. On the other hand it offers more capabilities than it competitors: rss reader, small contact list... It is different, but it does not make it a worse device. Personally, I find this change quite refreshing.
You could try to compare some usual tasks: open two web pages and switch between them, how an icoming IM message is handled etc.
Great post.
I especially agree with the part about the home screen.
Either make it iphone like with some nice application launchers, or make it an area that gives you useful information. For instance new RSS entries, unread e-mails and online contacts (currently only rss is available as an applet).
The bar on the left could be removed as far as I'm concerned. It takes up a lot of pixels and I hardly ever use it (apart from opening the applications menu).
You know what? YES, i agree with you 100%.
I love the N800 and its siblin and its purpose, but if Nokia want Joe public to use these devices to their best without hassle, things have to change.
Especialy the Destop client idea, and i have alot of feasable ideas for that.
With the MIDs coming loaded with Ubuntu mobile, Nokia must update their software...
I agree with most of your ideas, but I would like to take issue with your comments on the home screen. I actually like the concept of the current home screen; I like that my weather and newsfeeds are there as soon as the device comes on. In fact, my main problem with it is that I want it to do more; having a list of my online contacts or being able to park documents on it (or maybe just a list of recently opened ones) would be great. Yes, the Apple and Sony devices have greatly simplified interfaces, but there's no getting around the fact that they *do less.* The iPhone doesn't even multitask, an idea I find ironic considering Palm OS has been vilified for years for that limitation, and Apple introduced a new device with it. Exposing greater user functionality to the user doesn't always require a more complicated interface, but using an iPhone-style interface would be taking a step backward.
The app panel, however, I will agree with you: it's overly complex, and needs to be simplified. I see how Nokia wanted to make Web and comm stuff available from everywhere, but I don't think people really understand what they were trying to do.
Everything else, I agree with you 100%.
Thanks SOOOO MUCH for speaking this out aloud!
That is exactly why i started www.mojocafe.net - even knowing that most of the *nix people out there HATE Adobe Flash. But sooner or later if we want the device to survive, we have to appeal special services and applets to the "Joe Consumer Family" like you mentioned that fit into the screen size of the internet tablets.
That is exactly why i started the project menioned above.
Like you said, the n-series now exist for over 2 years and i was realy REALY REEEEALY astonished about realizing that there still are no yellow pages showing 800x480 optimized websites.
imagine something like a google search only showing websites developed for certain screen sizes!
Now that is an idea for a killer startup project! ;)
Big greetings,
Carlos
http://www.mojocafe.net
yep, it's not for mainstream consumers..
.. but it looks like MIDs will be as:
they are truly connected/modile with build in hsdpa
they perform about 5 times better on surfing ( maybe even 10 ;) )
the ecosystem is huge, there will be so many different types of devices to pick, all with the same base platform
the second i tested gigabyte m528 i knew it will be all what nokias "internet"* tablet should be.
* i think it can't do web
agree 100%
as a geek it was fun at first getting everything to work..trying this and that..i was hurting for a toy to play with..but now that's over and i just want my tablet to exactly what you envision.
"There's a globe, a few people standing around, and scene from Q*bert. "
That line gave me a huge smirk. Classic. Haven't thought about Qbert in years.
thoughtfix, your best post, yet. Well thought out points.
I would add that the slow rendering/scrolling is likely to be a hardware issue.
After getting my N95, I have almost stopped using the N800.
Agree on almost everything you said.
Nokia is the biggest mobile company and it really is a small thing for them to make a better ui. The problem is that the maemo team is so very small. look at the different phone models that are being churned out......
I think the phone market is saturated. people want more of portable computers which can call phones rather than the other way round. Nokia just has to give equal importance to the tablets. Time is fast running out.
I almost agree - except for 2 points:
In my experience, the average consumer is much more forgiving than the NIT-crowd is. Quite a few pppl I know bought the N800 after they saw my 770... I never recommended it, they just did. Those are people who have troubles using their Windows PCs, but they're content with the tablets. I don't know if they go "wow" each time they use them, but whatever bugs me about the tablets, they don't even notice.
Second, any UI needs to reflect the capabilities of the device. You can highlight some functions and make them easily accessible (thats what the maemo UI does), but you cannot make it "simple" if it has to control an unlimited number of functions. The Eee is a good example of what happens then: It looks a lot like my moms kitchen after dad did the cooking; it takes ages to find things again.
Greetings ThoughtFix:
I enjoy using my N800.
But to get the average joe to use this Internet Tablet Nokia has to:
-bumpup the processor speed to 900mhz or 1ghz.
-change the OS2008 to Windows XP easy mode.
- improve the user interface.
Regards Robert
I am kind of surprised you did not mention Canola in this post. The "important apps" you identified are all communication-centric. Important, no doubt, but to me, and the few other tablet owners I know, the multimedia aspects are equally important.
Canola brings all the media together in one, easy-to-use and intuitive interface. Of course, it still falls into the named problem of "what does the user do first" but if they can easily find the canola app, it should be easy from there. This type of app is a great indicator of what could be done to completely alter the first-time-user experience.
I've got both an N800 and an N810 and for me it all boils down to speed: the whole platform is so underpowered. Browsing is slow, checking for updates (in red pill mode which you need for many beta apps) is slow, trying to play a video that works flawlessly on my son's PSP is a slideshow, etc. It's still quite useful but for the average consumer, I just don't think they have the patience.
@Kevin T. Neely:
I believe canola is the perfect example of how easily people mix up "pretty" and "easy to use". Its UI is not intuitive! Some weeks ago, I recommended it to a friend of mine who is a real non-geek. He wants things to work. while he was impressed by the eye candy, his photos didnt show up. He looked for something like "file:open", because thats what he expects in software. I let him play a while only to find out he'd never realize that he needed to go to "settings" and tell canola to index his memory card. when i told him eventually, his next shock was that all at once he had all the pictures on the screen, including some juicy porn. the software doesnt do what he expects. it doesnt follow well-established concepts of how things work on a computer. no, it is not user-friendly, let alone intuitive. its pretty, though.
I totally agree
Great post, Thoughtfix. You've got your finger on the pulse of the problem with the tablets.
For the moment the N800/810 is like democracy: it's the worst form factor and system solution except for all the others. I use it daily A LOT and mostly at home and in home office: checking/writing e-mail, Twitter, blogs, news, YouTube, playing back podcasts... If and when work takes me back on the road the iPhone may seduce me, and I don't see Nokia developing the IT platform with winning energy, and no doubt there's a Maemo-killer somewhere down the road.
Great post. Glad someone else is saying this.
The hard part will be for Maemo and Nokia to agree on how best to keep developers interested while cleaning up the user experience for better consumer adoption. I'd love to sit in on that meeting personally. It would be a great mind-melding session I am sure.
Something that I wish could happen (but we are too far along in timelines mostl likey for it) is that OS2008 would see a major update that would clean up much of the broken UI/UX issues that have been voiced here and elsewhere about speed, consistent user interface elements, and program completeness (aka no beta prorgrams as default apps). This is something that could not just prolong the OS2008 sect; but also speak as a great bridge towards the much more advanced feature set and UX that would be expected from OS2009 and later. I don't agree that putting all of that kind of development on the Maemo community is a solid thing to do. This would be that area where a coherant vision of a big company needs to override the multitude of voices of such a developer community such as Linux.
Thanks for the post Thoughtfix; you've brought out a lot of people who normally wouldn't speak/comment.
Well said. And about time! Of course the other equally ignored potential for the tablets/mids/secondary device space is the enterprise. Here we have folks clamoring for a larger screen portable device hmmm...
I think that the main problems are:
1. No built-in HSDPA
2. Crappy video codecs and resolutions support (full resolution DivX, H264, Mpeg2, smooth online flash video streaming...)
3. Worse storage with N810 then N800 and no hard drive storage option.
4. No video-recording
5. Still too much useless plastic space around the screen.
6. Rather remove the Thumb keyboard (on-screen keyboard is about just as fast) to use good foldable Bluetooth keyboard instead and make the device thinner.
There are just some of the features Nokia needs to integrate in the next version for me to consider buying it.
That's it, you said it all.
I'd just add a good PIM suite. Every Palm ex-user misses it. It's really a shame the lack of a good one.
I totally agree with you.
I just think that a there are a few changes that could make the NIT a normal consumer device:
- faster web app (loading) - faster cpu?
- easier way too see/launch apps (iphone is a click away, i wont' be too happy to clone that UI, but something equivalent will greatly help)
- some cooool applications already "bundled" like "Numpty Physics" "mplayer" "mytube"
All this resume to: just one click away to: browse, email, youtube, multimedia
I agree, but you forgot about the part where Joe Consumer tried to open this post trough the RSS-reader to comment on this post, but had to open the browser and go to tabletblog.com manually because the RSS-reader froze once again and could not be terminated because there is no simple way to directly terminate a frozen application. Accept for the fact that my name isn't Joe Consumer this is a true story. I love my N800 and love it even more since it joined it's forces with my new N82, but the things you described and the crappy RSS-reader and no way to terminate frozen apps still bug me. I hope the people at maemo fix this sooner or later.
Since noone else commented, I just wanted to add two things:
1. I know I made a typo: where it says 'accept' it should be 'except'. English isn't my native language...
2. I own a Nokia N800. When the N810 came out I didn't feel the need to buy it since the only difference was the keyboard and the GPS-receiver. I think the on-screen thumb keyboard types about as fast as a regular keyboard on a portable device (I'm doing that right now) since you use only two thumbs in both occasions. I even think that a regular keyboard would be slower (has anyone ever tested this?). And as for the GPS-receiver: spend €40-50 and you'll have a nice external SiRF III module, which is even better than the chipset inside the N810.
You're probably wondering: where the heck is he going with this? I'll tell you. If there is so little to persuade Joe Consumer to buy a NIT and so little for an N800 owner to upgrade to the N810, who on earth is going to buy the N810 WiMax edition? I use the N800 through a HSDPA network which costs me less than €10 a month and I usaually have a connection speed of about 1.2mbps, which is more than enough for the things you do on a NIT. This is the second upgrade I can buy and, if WiMax was available in the Netherlands, I don't see the point of throwing away my N800 and spendig almost half a mont salary. Now I even wrote more than Thoughtfix :P
I'll echo the comment above about the lack of a *good* PIM suite. I'm still carrying around my Palm T3 as the various PIMs are just not there yet.
I do like the UI as I'm a heavy multitasker and it works well for that. However, adding a default home page launcher applet could help sell the device. (It would also be nice if the RSS home page applet was more configurable for its spacing and fonts.)
On the hardware side, adding some RAM would
also help performance for me sometimes. It would also be nice to have the option of adding a GSM/GPRS module as carrying around a separate cell phone gets tiring sometime --- although a substantial increase in battery capacity would be needed for that. I'm tempted to try an Android phone, and I wonder if I'll still need an IT once I have one.
One of the biggest assets that the N800/N810 have is the 4.2" 800x480 screen as that resolution makes a huge difference for some applications. I'm surprised that the marketing never focuses on this.
A sane way of updating software would be nice. No other device I own requires me to specifically go and check for updates, they all do it themselves.
A way to "undo" an update would be good too. I just upgraded Canola and it's not playing OGG files now. I haven't the time or inclination to really work out why, I'd prefer to just go "oops... Undo" and use the version I was running before updating.
And it needs traditional PDA apps on it. It really does, it's a totally wasted area that the tablets could be used in. "Use Google Calendar" is not an acceptable alternate because it doesn't work offline.
I've shown my N800 to people and they've gone "oh cool, so it's a PDA, right?". When I explain it's pretty much just a portable web browser they go "oh." in a disinterested way.
I agree with everything ThoughtFix said in this post. I bought an N800 for my wife. She loves using it as a media player and game console, especially being able to share media with her friends. However, the out of the box experience was ridiculous. Nothing that she wanted to use worked except the web browser. She gave me the device back and asked me to fix it! It took about about three days of my spare time to find and install a useful media player, calendar, and contact manager. It was particularly annoying that even software advertised on Nokia's tablet site wouldn't install without red pill mode. I also picked up a bunch of little games and desktop widgets along the way. Once I got all the software installed, she hasn't had any trouble figuring out how to use it. However, the current issues with installing software make it impossible for this device to appeal to mainstream consumers.
Just today I am trying to get my N810 to sync with my online calendars... Now there is software out there that does this, but it's not in any of the repositories that I have, and when I download and try to install the software it tells me that I am missing some files. Ok. Now I know that UNIX is more of a lets get our fingers dirty and hack up some stuff to make it do what I want, but that's not what the average person wants. And it seems this is just where Nokia is leaving things. Instead of stepping up to the plate and creating some standards for the device. (Standards can be created that don't stop people from being creative or installing whatever they want, but the do tend to allow those who are not familiar with UNIX to get done what they want to do)
This is a bit disjointed because I don't want to stop my 4 hour work on installing this new capability on my N810, so please bear with me as I list out my frustrations with the device.
1. Why is it that anyone under the sun is allowed to put up a repository that contains things that break other things?
2. Why is it that when I go to install things, that I am 70% of the time told that I don't have some file that is needed? Should the installer JUST find that and install it for me? I don't want to look all over the net to find the stupid piece of software.
3. Why is it that Nokia doesn't officially support anything? I mean I bought this neat device to help me in business and to allow me to surf, play with UNIX etc... But it would be nice if I didn't have to rely on third parties to "fix" BASIC issues with the device. Like a real calendar / emailer / spreadsheet / word proc / etc...
4. It's just not as useful as the iTouch.
5. Does update the file list every time I look at any installable package? I updated it once, STOP I don't need you to do it again...
Anyway my frustration level has almost hit the point where I am going to eBay the N810 and buy an iTouch. Help Nokia, stop me from doing this. But you have to put some real resources into making it useable to EVERYONE, not just those who don't mind putting 24 hours of work into installing one new package...
Wake up and Smell the Coffee...
I think you're absolutely right...
I've been using the Nokia tablets since the 7710 (Hildon on Symbian S90) and although the interface has improved, it is not yet ready fr prime time!
Personally, I prefer browsing the web on my iPhone - I only use the N810 when I want Flash or cut & paste support on the go (like blogging).
I am actually considering this device because of the VOIP .. Skype in particular. I teach online courses (programming) on top of my day job as a Computer Science teacher. I am required to talk to my students through SKYPE for the online course but I'm finding it hard to have a life because I'm tied to my laptop during my "office hours", even if no students contact me during those hours. If I had this, I could plan my errands around HotSpots during my "office hours", allowing me to work more mobile than I currently can. I'm considering many devices, and the iTouch went out the window when I found out I can't have SKYPE on it. I don't need a phone, per say, but I do need SKYPE (not like an addiction need, like a working need!) and I need an Internet browser. Now if it would let me run an emulator for QBasic, I could throw away my laptop!
Great job.
And now I feel even more forgotten by Nokia. Again (E90).
I just hope, that there are clever people (not from Nokia) doing my N800 OS2008 software more user friendly.
clmanchester:
Skype works great with maemo, especially in the latest (Chinook) release where they improved the voice quality.
It's voice only though, if you want video, you need to use (pre-installed) GTalk client. The builtin device camera is not very good (low resolution and colors could be better), but adequate.
As for Basic, AFAIK that's not available for the devices. I would recommend using Python instead, see:
http://docs.python.org/tut/
and:
http://diveintopython.org/
I am "Joe consumer" and i bought a Nokia N800. I really like it, BUT, how do i get other applications on it? I don't understand Linux and all of the websites are written for computer people. Please help?
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