ScottM
Taxi to Parking
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iBazinga!
Here it is
http://www.verizonwireless.com/b2c/...t&action=viewPhoneDetail&selectedPhoneId=3765I've been waiting for the iphone. Although I have to admit that I'd rather stay with Verizon than go to ATT.
Any "iphone killers" available through Verizon?
I had the original Moto Q and noticed if the battery ran all the way down....it died. Yup, died. Even after recharging, it would get hung at the splash screen and there was no way to perform a hard reset according to Motorola.
Analog roaming??Battery life in roaming areas went fairly fast. Extended batteries helped there.
I'll be ditching Verizon next month and paying the $175 contract termination fee, AT&T and $200 iPhone here I come
Analog roaming??
As roaming form one digital network to another should not affect battery life in the least. But if it was a Verizon or Sprint they could go into analog (AMPS) mode for voice only operations and that would eat batteries.
I'm mostly looking for a decent phone, with decent web browsing capability, and a decent mp3 player. The iPhone fits the bill.iPhone, being a 2g phone with very few reasons to be stuck to AT&T, works a lot better, IMHO on T-Mobile's network. Jailbreaking is easy as pie to do, and the plans are cheaper.
Coverage area is nearly identical to AT&T's. If you're looking for 3g capabilities then AT&T is the place to go, but not with the iPhone.
Was it the phone or the M$ OS?Moto Q is TERRIBLE. I just got rid of it for a Blackberry Curve. Much happier.
Accept you are not getting the iPhone for $200 you are getting it for $375 since you are having to pay the penalty for canceling your Verizon service.I have a feeling it'd be hard to get the new iPhone for $200 without subscribing with AT&T, as far as the cost, my phone absolutely has to work. I'd rather not have something unofficially hacked in attempt to save a few dollars.
Aren't we suppose to support the procurement of new gadgets irrespective of cost?Accept you are not getting the iPhone for $200 you are getting it for $375 since you are having to pay the penalty for canceling your Verizon service.
Well, my current phone is pretty much trashed. I refuse to renew my contract with Verizon--so this means that I either need to buy another phone or just eat the contract and switch.Accept you are not getting the iPhone for $200 you are getting it for $375 since you are having to pay the penalty for canceling your Verizon service.
Moto Q is TERRIBLE. I just got rid of it for a Blackberry Curve. Much happier.
That has happened several times now too!My biggest issue with the RIM products is their proprietary data services. Everything HAS to be routed through their network and back out to the carriers. When (not if) RIM has an outage, it's major problems.
Well, that's not 100% true...
For example, if you connect a wifi capable RIM devic to a wireless router, anything that doesn't require RIM's clearance goes through the wifi (browsing for example). Instant messaging that is not based on SMS does require BIS and so does Blackberry Maps, but that is because those services need to be verifed.
That has happened several times now too!
Actually, most of that is 100% not true for users that are not on a BES, but I can tell this discussion is going to be tainted by some bad experience you've had in the past, so its really not worth getting into.
If you want to connect to a BES, you deal with possible issues on the BES. The most recent RIM outage was a maintenance issue and happened at 11pm Pacific time on a Friday night. That seems pretty reasonable to me. RIM has many faults, but this is not one of them.
I looked at AT&T but the coverage wasn't as good as Alltel so I decided to stay with Alltel. Apple should let all the carriers have the iphone. Does anyone know why Apple went exclusively with AT&T? You would think Apple would be able to sell a lot more phones if they opened up to all carriers.
You should see the politics of technology decisions! It makes sausage making look clean.Thanks for the explanation Scott. I never realized it was that involved.
Unlocked phones are a tiny, tiny market compared to subsidized ones. The store front that sell unlocked phones buys them in very small lots compared to the 100's of thousands that the carriers buy.While Scott is right, the Cell phone manufacturers are wrong. They should not be looking at the company as the end user at all, and here's why:
Unlocked GSM phones are growing more and more popular every day.
Nope, absolutely not true with todays market model. The iPhone was pretty hot and Apple may have sold a lot more phones than normal if they had an unlocked model. But the numbers would still be small compared to their sales to AT&T.That means, had Apple chosen to not subsidize with AT&T only, they would have sold more phones.
Wrong and it is not only Motorola that signs these deals. Samsung, LG, HTC etc all are forced by the carriers to sign them as a condition of selling phones to that carrier. If direct sales were so good the manufacturers would do so. But the truth is that the vast majority of people do not want to pay the 300-500 dollars for a cell phone. They like getting the $49 subsidized handset.If Motorola would stop signing exclusivitiy deals with Verizon and AT&T first, they'd sell more phones.
I can assure you the unlocked sales were in the noise compared to the sales to carriers.A lot of people wanted the V8 that wound up buying them unlocked, that should show Motorola that there's a market they're missing.
WiMAX is not supporting UMA and UMA is not supporting WiMAX. The people that could make that work are in competition with one another so don't get to excited about the possible buy out. BTW the rumor for DT buying Sprint applies ONLY to the Sprint/Nextel (iDEn) technology. It is not for their CDMA or WiMAX networks.I really hope that DT does buy Sprint, btw, Sprint is a dying company, but their WiMax stuff would work so well with T-Mobile's UMA stuff.
What does this mean when users can install third-party apps on their phones, and use USB or PC card modems plugged into their laptops, running whatever apps they like?Also when it comes to feature development carriers are very funny about what they will allow on their network. Verizon is creating a certification program that they run, that manufacturers will have to build to and only certified equipment will be allowed on their network.
Many phones are locked to stop you form doing that. The greatest concern I hear form carriers is the very scenario that you have mentioned. They are looking for ways to control the device, the content on the device and access to the network. They do not want to become just a pipe provider.What does this mean when users can install third-party apps on their phones, and use USB or PC card modems plugged into their laptops, running whatever apps they like?
-harry
The people that could make that work are in completion with one another so don't get to excited about the possible buy out.
Darn auto correcting spell checker!Emphasis mine.
I get excited when I complete someone else.
iPhone, being a 2g phone with very few reasons to be stuck to AT&T, works a lot better, IMHO on T-Mobile's network. Jailbreaking is easy as pie to do, and the plans are cheaper.
Coverage area is nearly identical to AT&T's. If you're looking for 3g capabilities then AT&T is the place to go, but not with the iPhone.
Here it is
Um, Nick? Ya must not have been paying attention. The 3G iPhone ships on July 11th. They stopped selling the 2G version a few weeks ago.
http://www.apple.com/iphone/
LOL Scott. In reality, the iPhone is amazingly durable.
A couple of weeks ago, I somehow ended up in a conversation with a guy at "Interstate Connections" which is a group that has kiosks at truck stops where they sell cell phones, satellite radios, and accessories. He asked if I would like to buy a cell phone. I whipped out the iPhone and said "Got anything that can beat this?"
His reply: "Oh yeah! Those things suck. You can't get insurance on them, which you really need because they're so fragile."
I dropped my iPhone on the floor. "Oops!" Reached over to pick it up, purposely dropped it again. "Aww man!" He had this shocked look on his face. "Gee, yeah, it's really fragile."
Then he went to #2 on their list of 10 "why not to buy an iPhone" reasons that they're required to memorize (no, I'm not kidding): The screen scratches really easily. So, I pulled out my keychain, took the sharpest key on it and "scratched" all over the screen. In reality, not a single scratch. In fact, before I had a case for it, when I dropped it I began hoping it'd hit the ground screen-first because the METAL case on the back scratched more easily than the screen!
At this point, I took pity with the poor guy (he did seem to be coming around anyway) and didn't stick around to disprove numbers 3 through 10.
Sounds like Kent is trying to break his phone so he can justify buying the new 3G version
7500 time.
Kent's story reminds me of the calculator wars of the 70s, when HP and TI were slugging it out for the big sales in the engineering & scientific calculator market.
Friend of mine's brother was an engineer with Arco, in Alaska on the pipeline project. TI and HP were invited to make competing proposals for a large sale of calculators (remember, these were the better part of a thousand bucks in those days).
The HP guy went first, told all about everything the calc could do, yadda yadda yadda.
Then the TI guy goes on, tells how his calculator could do everything the HP could do (and it could, pretty much), and cost a fair bit less (and it did). Smugly sits down.
HP guy stands up, picks up his HP (35, I think...), and throws it - hard - against the wall, picks it up and hands it to one of the evaluating engineers. It works (they were built stout).
TI guy acknowledges- "You have me there."
Sounds like Kent is trying to break his phone so he can justify buying the new 3G version
Well, now I just have to tell thegeek story of how Leslie and I started going together. We were in Calculus together at U of Chicago, and were the only two in the entire class who had TI calculators. All the others were HP. I, however, DID know how to program my TI-66, and was more than willing to teach her! We still have at least one of those calculators, and it still works!I have my HP calc from 25 years ago works great. When I used TI's they last 2-3 months before the keys started breaking. I know own 5 HP calculators.
That is such a cool geek love storyWell, now I just have to tell thegeek story of how Leslie and I started going together. We were in Calculus together at U of Chicago, and were the only two in the entire class who had TI calculators. All the others were HP. I, however, DID know how to program my TI-66, and was more than willing to teach her! We still have at least one of those calculators, and it still works!