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Post by Forum Cat on Mar 11, 2011 19:48:23 GMT
why does Steve Wozniak carry two and a motorola droid? because the droid makes good calls! Has the Woz actually said this or is this something you are assuming? As a gadget nut I would think that he would have loads of devices "just cos he can" rather like St Steven Fry. ;D
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Post by tumnurkoz on Mar 11, 2011 21:01:38 GMT
The engadget video podcast. Very nice guy and surprisingly honest!worth a watch, especially how he got the white iphone!
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Post by Forum Cat on Mar 11, 2011 23:06:32 GMT
The engadget video podcast. Very nice guy and surprisingly honest!worth a watch, especially how he got the white iphone! I don't subscribe to that podcast. I am guessing that Woz is in a Verizon area. There is nothing wrong with the iPhone. There were however gaps in the coverage of the sole iPhone carrier AT&T
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Post by OziDug on Mar 20, 2011 23:31:26 GMT
tumnurkoz: Woz carries even more phones than I do because he's a geek. I carry two - a cheap Nokia clamshell which I use for phone calls, a Nokia E72 which I use for 3G / web access (but cannot trust due to the previously mentioned hardware fault), as well as an iPod Touch, so I recognise geekiness and welcome it ;-) The Motorola Droid is a good phone, and its good to see Motorola coming back to the market. It's only a year ago (maybe a little more) that one of their VPs addressed us in Nokia saying that they were committed to Symbian OS as a strategic direction. Times change pretty rapidly in this market. And it's always possible that the Nokia could switch away from MS even before Windows comes out on Nokia products: there's certainly some concern within the company at what's happened. And the N8 was a pretty good phone. We knew it wasn't ripe for release, but we hadn't released a new phone for so long (it was delayed several times while bugs were sorted) and they didn't want to repeat the sorry saga of the N97. But the details are pretty permanent - Nokia downloads will pass to Microsoft, although Betalabs could survive. Developers never paid any attention to customer complaints, but Betalabs provided a feedback path that they did listen to. So Nokia software was progressing pretty well, I thought, until that announcement.
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