I really like the way this looks. I'm slightly offended by the UI, blatantly, being ripped off from Palm (WebOS) but if they bring this out at an attractive price point I may be persuaded to not care.
I really like the way this looks. I'm slightly offended by the UI, blatantly, being ripped off from Palm (WebOS) but if they bring this out at an attractive price point I may be persuaded to not care.
@vinod1978: You're right, Sprint shouldn't 'have to' and they don't 'have to'.
@Sunsparc: Why wouldn't they just mail him an envelope, give him the address to the nearest store and ask him to put a note with the phone?
I used to love SE feature phones, but SE let me down by, seemingly always, releasing the best feature phones overseas. Their extremely slow release and excruciating update cycle for the X10 did nothing to restore my faith.
@kentadams: That's an odd comment considering a portion of the lyrics for Rapper's Delight were stolen from Grandmaster Caz.
I regularly say, "That's the dumbest thing I've ever heard/read!", and on a consistent basis I'm proven wrong. This is the dumbest thing I've heard/read... today!
Some of these comments are just as scary as this attempted ban.
3D certainly has potential (as a niche), IMO, but they're counting their chickens before they're hatched.
I've only owned SE phones for the past 11 years. Actually, my first phone was an Ericsson and I followed them into the Sony co-op. I've loved all of my SE phones from the T18 (Ericsson) to my W760... until next month.
@KefkaticFanatic: Since they're both Galaxy S phones, the only difference being the packaging, the guts should be identical. The camera options could be different altering actual performance.
I can't say definitively that I'll be getting a WP7 Phone. But it's a seriously strong consideration.
@dantheman12: My understanding is that you will be able to search Comcast listing, but Google TV will search an online listing not pull it directly from Comcast, as it does with Dish.
@ddhboy: I use videoconferencing daily in my job. Cisco may reign supreme in the enterprise market, eventually, but only because they bought Tandberg.
It's hard to say what I would pick right now. I'll be in the market for a new phone in about 2 months and I'm simultaneously OCD/excited and concerned, for a variety of reasons.
The only party at "risk" in the equation is T-mobile. Google makes money from the ads, HTC makes money from the hardware. T-Mobile makes money from the voice/data plans. Any phone that's rooted or uses a custom ROM has the potential to suck up tons more data (tethering/hotspot) without paying for the privilege.