jurrasix
Dino_the_Dino
jurrasix

Angry birds is great, for maybe 20 minutes while passing time waiting for a bus. It's a game that's not meant to steal my attention away from reality like AAA titles do. It's a game I can pick up and put down at any time without a worry. Sometimes you just can't put down your controller (like playing Uncharted 2).

So this is the Incredible S...and why is it leaked if it's already on their website? I guess Verizon could call it the Incredible 2, but it looks identical to, and has the same specs as the already announced Incredible S...which you can look at in full right here.

I'd agree with you, but there are things about Sense that are just better than stock Android. Sure, I still prefer to run 2.3 over whatever version of Sense is out right now, but HTC offered exchange support first with their skin and still has the best dialer. The list is longer than that, but I don't care to call

No disagreeing there. Consumers are stupid. You'll find them being that way regardless of the platform.

Well I don't know what the misconception is then. Apple certainly does it differently and on a much more limited scale (in terms of background processes) than other companies. Why be bothered by a company who points out the differences in something like that? The whole droid does series is based around the differences

Just relating my experiences. Though I think my iPod is part of the fragmented side of iOS. iOS multitasking still freezes apps in the background (except for certain features) instead of letting them run. I would consider multitasking having them running in the background. Doesn't matter though since the user

Well I tested a couple different games out. Each time I always have to sit through the opening load screen. It never takes me straight back to where I was. It will eventually load back to my progress in game if there's a pause feature built in, but I'm always going through the load screen like it's relaunching the

I can't test this on my iPod (it just freezes and quits everything when I try), but can you open a game of Angry Birds, pause it, switch to mail, write an email, send a text, then come back to angry birds and be at the exact same place in game?

But you do need to leave whatever app you are in on iOS then navigate the settings menu then toggle those settings. The problem is what you said. It's just as fast as going to the home screen. Android you don't even have to interrupt or leave anything. That's my annoyance.

Well app settings are different. Why would I be adjusting an app setting outside of the app? Most of the time I am trying to change something I'm in the app itself. Leaving it, launching settings, and then going through that process would just be more work for me.

Basically it got a facelift and some performance boosts to "match" the competition. It's still the same well received device and will sell well. However, I haven't felt like iOS has truly evolved since the app store. It's got some nice little changes like their version of multitasking, but they gloss over all my

I have both. It's just nice to have the same software on both.

Zune is already on the phone, on their desktops, on their PMP platform, and tied into Xbox/XBL. It's everywhere they want their next thing to be.

I'm sure at the least you're violating their ToS. Jailbreaking may be legal, but that doesn't mean everything you do after that is legal. Pirating apps certainly is not.

The more I try to figure out what I'm asking the more I realize how stupid the question was in the first place.

Well I could be off here, but the Retina display added more clarity and not screen space. So a new 13" MBP screen would be a 1280x800 screen with double the DPI (which would put it closer to 200 something). That would make my text look better, but it would all remain the same size (icons same size, windows same size)

I'm not really worried about the lack of completeness in the first iteration of Honeycomb. If you have already invested in something Android, you know exactly what to expect in terms of hardware, software, performance, and all around experience. If you enjoy that experience and want a tablet then here's your choice.

But that doesn't answer the OPs question and I think it's a pretty fair question to be asking. There's no reason to turn over that information considering it's not at all related to this issue and is in fact legal.

I agree and the other respondents clearly just prove your point. Even though the update bumped it's specs to be on par or below the competition, the software stayed the same and until it changes there's not really a major upgrade.

Is the iPad 2 hardware good enough? That's what you are asking. We know that whatever Android, RIM, HP tablet coming out this year will have the latest and greatest in terms of hardware and spec'd to the max. Will the supposed minimal amount of RAM hurt its performance? We will find out.