I understand you may be a Palm fanboi, and/or against the CrackBerry revolution, but based on the common definition of smartphone (see here : http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&pwst=1&defl=en&q=define:SmartPhone&sa=X&oi=glossary_definition&ct=title), a BlackBerry is considered a smartphone.
Remember that post in which you assumed something incorrectly about me?
I'm NOT a palm fanboi, in fact I dislike palms personally, but to each their own.
The problem is that the definition of the Smartphone has changed.
The original definition circa the year 2000-2003 was:
"A phone with an operating system that allows installation of third party applications", the idea of which is that you are not limited to the features it comes with out of the box, but rather new applications and customized programs and UI's can be implemented to keep the phone evolving with your needs.
Then the blackberry and iPhones came along and shook up the market. New phones with "smart features" popped up and claimed the title smartphone despite the fact that didn't have operating systems capable of third part apps.
Now, this definition has officially changed and is only a memory by those who followed the industry a decade ago.
I'm sorry if I refuse to recognize the blackberry as a smartphone. I used to refuse to recognize the iPhone as well, however with the recent updates and the development API made available to the public, its hard to say that the iPhone is not now "smarter" than the blackberry.
And I don't dislike the blackberry. It has its charm, and it definitely has its place in the mobile world. But there are things it is, and things it is NOT.
Additionally, some of the statements you've made in this thread (like your explanation on how opera mini is a remote desktop client to servers in Scandinavia, ), are inaccurate. I understand you are a cellphone enthusiast, but (CMIIW), I don't think that makes you an authority on all things mobile.
I never claimed to be an expert on all things mobile. However, I'm starting to get the notion that perhaps I know a thing or two that some of the regulars here are not aware of. If you want to crown me "expert", that's your own prerogative.
Sadly, I think you have "assumed" incorrectly once again.
I never said opera mini is a remote desktop client. I said its "LIKE" a remote desktop client in that you're not actually on the web page veiwing html. Opera mini has servers in Norway that its clients connect to and receive a page with reduced size graphics and formatting in a proprietary format to fit on a mobile device's screen. This is known as "server side compression", and makes the loading time of a web page on a mobile device much quicker since you are only receiving and rendering an optimized shadow of the original site.
This is similar to remote desktop in which the server computer is doing the work, and you're watching it from a terminal window. The downside to browsing this way is that speed tests are innacurate (since its the speed of the server to the test, not your phone) and some sites such as targeted advertising, assume the wrong region since they only see the Norwegian IP address of the server.
Sheesh. Read my stuff carefully, man.
As the proud owner of a CrackBerry, I can clearly attest to the fact that my phone is smart.
Spoken like a true fanboi. A blanket statement with no reason to back it up.
fanbois FTW!