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You have to take the bad with the good, I suppose.

@123rufus: That would ruin the illusion that the iPhone is something more than a computer.

Is there a metal lip that the phone rests on, or is the glass completely unprotected?

I just put my hand in my pocket. Cost? Nothing... and it's fun, too!

@Matt0505: Android doesn't have the "cultiness" about it that the iPhone does, and that's part of the allure. You feel left out, but in reality you are enjoying a level of smartphone ownership that iPhone users can only imagine, and Apple would never allow. Drink in the freedom.

@CowZ: I think you answered your own question.

That film is really hard to watch.

Save the planet, kill people.

@r33brooks: No, the Droid 2 and Droid X are different phones. The X doesn't have a physical keyboard.

Why is it that the most religious states are also the least compassionate?

Had Georgia O'Keeffe been a bartender.

@Eulatos: Well that's a pretty uninformed argument to make. Both have highs and lows. They are roughly equivalent, but not the same.

@Kaiser-Machead: Okay, what I mean is that while you might find OS X better, I might find it confounding and intrusive. There is no overwhelming disparity in quality between them, just differences.

Windows 7 is better than or equal to anything else on the market. Anyone who says otherwise is kidding themselves. Otherwise I agree with just about everything, but I put a lot more weight on the negatives (since there are equivalent-or-better alternatives available to all the positives that I care about,) and that

@Jon Jessee: But does the home itself have iOS installed? That's what I meant, although maybe I didn't elaborate enough. I'm talking about a home that is its own computer, a home that can detect a fire, activate a sprinkler system, and dial 911 even before you hear the alarm go off. Since Apple won't allow iOS to

Very nice. If only it were a Google Experience device, then I would be really jealous.