Compared to its contemporaries, the E90’s Facebook app held a middle ground. It was far superior to the WAP (Wireless Application Protocol) or zero-rated “Facebook Zero” text-only interfaces found on basic feature phones. But it was inferior to the experience on a desktop PC or a laptop with a Wi-Fi connection. More critically, it was completely outclassed by the first-generation iPhone and early Android devices, which, despite their own early shortcomings, introduced capacitative touchscreens, kinetic scrolling, and a direct-manipulation interface that made social scrolling intuitive. The E90 represented the end of the keyboard-and-stylus era; Facebook’s future would be built for fingers, not buttons.
เราใช้คุกกี้เพื่อพัฒนาประสิทธิภาพ และประสบการณ์ที่ดีในการใช้เว็บไซต์ของคุณ คุณสามารถศึกษารายละเอียดได้ที่ นโยบายความเป็นส่วนตัว และสามารถจัดการความเป็นส่วนตัวเองได้ของคุณได้เองโดยคลิกที่ ตั้งค่า
Compared to its contemporaries, the E90’s Facebook app held a middle ground. It was far superior to the WAP (Wireless Application Protocol) or zero-rated “Facebook Zero” text-only interfaces found on basic feature phones. But it was inferior to the experience on a desktop PC or a laptop with a Wi-Fi connection. More critically, it was completely outclassed by the first-generation iPhone and early Android devices, which, despite their own early shortcomings, introduced capacitative touchscreens, kinetic scrolling, and a direct-manipulation interface that made social scrolling intuitive. The E90 represented the end of the keyboard-and-stylus era; Facebook’s future would be built for fingers, not buttons.