cturkoanje
Chris
cturkoanje

Nope, no issues with mine. I am even getting LTE where AT&T says I shouldn't!

** 3 times more

They actually fixed that.

Am I the only one that still likes the designs HTC puts out?

I guess it is not really a big feature for the device. I don't know a single person that uses iPod Out, or anyone that has a car that even supports iPod Out.

An adapter usually only maps the same pins between an old interface and a new interface. A converter actually does work and converts signals between 2 interfaces. The converter is actually a mini computer with a small microprocessor embedded that will convert the signal, not just work as a passthrough like an adapter

Lightning cable is not the same as the 30 pin adapter. The Lightning cables have been in stores and online for 2 weeks now.

But it is more of a converter than an adapter which is why it costs more. If it were only an adapter then it would cost $10 like all the other adapters Apple sells.

I guess that is why I love flying JetBlue, and I love Apple products.

I had 2 where the metal housing bent on me, I wasn't abusive with it, but I did leave it in my car so maybe the heat weakened the metal. But I have had a lot where the plastic would separate making the connector flimsy which is why I bought like 10 of them from Monoprice.

Lightning is a lot better than micro USB in my opinion. It feels more solid. Ad it doesn't bend as easily as micro USB since the pins are external and therefor the connector itself is solid not hollow like USB.

I say that is a little different, most of those leaks came from hardware manufactures, not Apple employees themselves.

Check the stores!

New York is very complicated, the OP said he had to go to 171st street in Flushing, well I don't know exactly what he put in the map but there are several 171st streets in NYC that are not even close to each other. There is 171st street in Manhattan, then again in the Bronx, and then again in Queens.

Okay, so? It is still damage of someone else's property.

Hmm, I was reading about this a while ago. Too bad the MTA hasn't given us any updates on how the trial is running.

They are doing a trial with NFC on the Port Washington line. I see the little NFC things all over Penn Station.

I really doubt that, 98 MB/s is just barely reaching the speed of a standard ethernet interface and almost 2X faster than any SSD out there. If you are talking about 98 Mbps, then I also doubt that as LTE has a theoretical speed of 100 Mbps. HSPA+ is 21 Mbps, and DC-HSDPA is 42Mbps. And there is no phone that would be

In a city with almost 5 million people all squeezed in to a 60 square km area that is great.

Exactly, on 2.4 GHz I got around 24 Mbps while on 5GHz I got around 63 Mbps on my network. (80 Mbps FiOS)