The next time you look at your on-device application store, with a
progress bar showing that an update to, say, Photos is taking an
outrageous 30 seconds to apply, here's a cautionary data point from a
decade ago...
2005
Reading (usually on AAS) that there was a fix for a particular issue I was having with Gallery (Photos), one of the built-in applications on my S60 smartphone, I decided to do something about it:09:30 Taking the morning off work, I set off for my local Nokia Service Centre (Camberley).
09:55 Arrived, checked in, Pete wasn't too busy and said he could have a look at my phone and check for the new firmware if I left it with him for an hour.
10:00 Went for a walk, bought a pasty and drink, watched the world go by.
10:30 Bored. Bought a magazine to read.
11:00 Popped back into the Centre and Pete had my phone wired up to a heavy duty PC. "Any luck?" I say, hopefully. "Yes, the new firmwares are on Nokia's servers" he says, "but your phone isn't taking the update."
11:15 After four attempts, the phone grudgingly starts to reflash its software.
11:25 "All done", says Pete, "and no charge, since it's in warranty!". Phew.
11:30 My S60 phone all booted up (you can't rush it), I check Gallery (Photos) and yep, all is now well. Oh, and that annoying SMS issue seems to be sorted too.
12:00 Arrive at work, just in time for lunch. A generally productive morning's effort, I thought.
2015
8:00 I glance at my Lumia 1020 smartphone. "Oh, Photos is working better now! That's good." I set off for work as normal!______________
It struck me, while watching updates to core system applications stream into a few of my smartphones (in this case a Lumia 1020 and Samsung Galaxy K Zoom), how far we've come. What used to take half a day now happens in the background without us even noticing. The combination of:
- a working Store/Download system (pioneered by Nokia [badly], successfully realised by Apple in 2008, and now standard on every phone)
- splitting as much OS functionality as possible, from system applications to service modules, out into a Store for end users to download
Anyone else remember th bad old days?(!)
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