Are you sure last thing I saw was q1Sarye said:no announcement yet but so far it is Q2.
Are you sure last thing I saw was q1Sarye said:no announcement yet but so far it is Q2.
Bad_Boy said:What? That means the 3g version is in May? I was hoping for february/march. That sucks.
Thats what I originally thought engadget said. Feb/march in Q1.Jamesfrom818 said:I think Matias Duarte mentioned February in his Engadget interview.
It's really exciting he mentioned he barely had any time to input on Gingerbread. Probably means drastic changes for the phone interface whether it's to be more like Honeycomb on tablets or not.zoku88 said:Matias seemed like an interesting guy.
It's nice that he said honeycomb was for phones and tablets, but I wonder what Honeycomb will look like on phones.
gcubed said:Are you sure last thing I saw was q1
ep85 said:I use iSyncr on Windows. They have a Mac version in the android marketplace also. Costs $2.99
It is extremely simple little program that simply works. Also syncs the ratings and play counts.
I have tried double twist and I didn't enjoy it. The software you need to install on your computer needs polish.
Futureman said:do all of your mp3 tags sync properly from iTunes? It's very random for me, sometimes they are perfect, sometimes the track titles work but it will say "Unknown Artist," sometimes the track # tag is messed up...
basically I'm trying to figure out the best way to get my tags working correctly in iTunes and on my Droid X. I used DoubleTwist syncer for a bit, but now I just connect the phone and do USB Mass Storage and drag and drop.
Bad_Boy said:Thats what I originally thought engadget said. Feb/march in Q1.
And May is pushing Q2, right?
The delay on that is most likely due to the iphone release. Actually the release of both, early for att late for verizon, is probably due to the iphone. One to combat it, one to stay away from itSarye said:you're right. I was thinking of the bionic.
alternade said:Kinda sucks that all T-mobile really doesnt have anything awesome in the pipeline. My Nexus One is really starting to show it age and the touchscreen is getting on my last nerve. I wonder if the Atrix will work on Tmo hspa+ though?
Also, what is the timeframe for HTC getting Dual Core phones out? Are they waiting on Qualcomm to roll them out? Are they that attached to them that they wouldnt just use a Tegra 2?
gcubed said:1) no it wont work on tmobile 3g or above
2) seems like they are waiting on qualcomm which is 2H of this year last i heard
my nexus one is running fine for the most part, the only time i feel compelled to get a new phone is when i have a rash of touch screen fuckups where i want to snap my phone in half. HTC can lick my balls
alternade said:Kinda sucks that all T-mobile really doesnt have anything awesome in the pipeline. My Nexus One is really starting to show it age and the touchscreen is getting on my last nerve. I wonder if the Atrix will work on Tmo hspa+ though?
Also, what is the timeframe for HTC getting Dual Core phones out? Are they waiting on Qualcomm to roll them out? Are they that attached to them that they wouldnt just use a Tegra 2?
Luckyman said:Chrome OS is dead before launch by Atrix..
Google is reallly stupid if they do not copy this idea and put Chrome OS to phones on top of Android.
Futureman said:Does anyone know if there's a "secondapps" equivalent for the xda forums?
As a fellow N1 owner, I'm pretty damn pissed as well. I initially thought we'd be getting updates simultaneously with the NS, then I grudgingly accepted being a half step behind, and now I'm dreading the day another Gingerbread phone is released and we still haven't gotten the OTA.Mercury Fred said:Anyone else considering dumping Android over the bungled Gingerbread roll out?
I'm a huge fan of the OS, and have loved my N1, but the way Google is handling the update is making me want to jump ship for a Verizon iPhone...
Mercury Fred said:Anyone else considering dumping Android over the bungled Gingerbread roll out?
I'm a huge fan of the OS, and have loved my N1, but the way Google is handling the update is making me want to jump ship for a Verizon iPhone...
I think xda supports Tapatalk.Futureman said:Does anyone know if there's a "secondapps" equivalent for the xda forums?
I thought the whole point of the Nexus line was to get pure Android with fast updates direct from Google.gcubed said:There is little I'm super excited about in gingerbread so I don't care as much. But why are you so upset? How are they bungling it? If a regular phone releases before the n1 gets gingerbread then I'll be pissed, but at this point phones coming out in the next month or so look to all be froyo.
Mercury Fred said:I thought the whole point of the Nexus line was to get pure Android with fast updates direct from Google.
And what we're seeing with the N1 and Gingerbread is that Google really has no plan and no idea what it's doing as far as timing goes. Messaging about the OTA update has been vague, contradictory, off, and sometimes just a flat out lie.
It's not only annoying to be left in limbo with the N1 but to be left wondering if the phone will be treated more and more like Google's red-headed step-child. I don't feel particularly confident that Google will continue supporting the N1 for any amount of time. I truly would not be surprised if we never get Gingerbread.
Mercury Fred said:Anyone else considering dumping Android over the bungled Gingerbread roll out?
I'm a huge fan of the OS, and have loved my N1, but the way Google is handling the update is making me want to jump ship for a Verizon iPhone...
cartoon_soldier said:Atrix Ad aired during Baltimore-Kansas game.
Can't be too far away from launch.
Now you are getting silly. Gingerbread will make it to the n1, yes the communication around has been flat out horrific, inconsistent and plain wrong, but gingerbread will make it on the n1. It has been trying with this release.Mercury Fred said:I thought the whole point of the Nexus line was to get pure Android with fast updates direct from Google.
And what we're seeing with the N1 and Gingerbread is that Google really has no plan and no idea what it's doing as far as timing goes. Messaging about the OTA update has been vague, contradictory, off, and sometimes just a flat out lie.
It's not only annoying to be left in limbo with the N1 but to be left wondering if the phone will be treated more and more like Google's red-headed step-child. I don't feel particularly confident that Google will continue supporting the N1 for any amount of time. I truly would not be surprised if we never get Gingerbread.
I think Gingerbread will make to N1 (by early Summer or so) but it wouldn't surprise me if it didn't. That's all I'm saying.gcubed said:Now you are getting silly. Gingerbread will make it to the n1, yes the communication around has been flat out horrific, inconsistent and plain wrong, but gingerbread will make it on the n1. It has been trying with this release.
This is nothing of the hardware issues, which for me is only the touch screen, but it thoroughly annoys me, but I blame htc on that and the reason why I want nothing to do with them for a while
I'm waiting for a new nexus phone and have hope that Google will step up to the big leagues and offer it on a real carrier out of the gatesFutureman said:Even if Google is bungling the OTA update a bit, I don't think it's a huge deal (though I am not a Nexus One owner). They tweeted very recently that it is coming. I think it's safe to say that you will see it on the Nexus One before any other phone.
Can't wait to see Honeycomb on phones. Google I/O is May 10-11 this year, so I bet we see the unveil there, probably be called Ice Cream 3.x, and then see a new Nexus model in the Fall with the debut of 3.x.
Agree that Nexus S is a big disappointment (although I like T-Mobile myself), but Google needs some consistency and much, much better customer service. Otherwise, I think people will abandon Android for better options (I'm extremely curious to see what happens with the iPhone going to other carriers).gcubed said:I'm waiting for a new nexus phone and have hope that Google will step up to the big leagues and offer it on a real carrier out of the gates
Iphone for me is limited by the scourge of a program called itunes, not carriersMercury Fred said:Agree that Nexus S is a big disappointment (although I like T-Mobile myself), but Google needs some consistency and much, much better customer service. Otherwise, I think people will abandon Android for better options (I'm extremely curious to see what happens with the iPhone going to other carriers).
But that's not the issue for lots of people.gcubed said:Iphone for me is limited by the scourge of a program called itunes, not carriers
Granted, we will see how crazy it is, there is a limited pool of people to sell to though. Switchers are stuck on contracts so I don't expect to see a mass exodus. It's going to sell quite a bit no matterMercury Fred said:But that's not the issue for lots of people.
MNC said:I know it's gonna be difficult but can someone recap what's 'wrong' with Gingerbread?I'm currently looking around for some Android phones and am wondering if I should just jump in now or wait or whatever.
gcubed said:Watch the Duarte interview on engadget for the future of android its a really good interview with the guy now responsible for ui
Yeah, it gives me a nice warm fuzzy feeling for the future of the platform.gcubed said:Watch the Duarte interview on engadget for the future of android its a really good interview with the guy now responsible for ui
Goes into how little input he had into gingerbread and how honeycomb is kinda the next step but how difficult it is to transform a hugely utilized os to something better. Some really cool honeycomb tidbitsjonnybryce said:Will do.
Yes, I'm all for the customizability of my phone, plus the fact that while iOS interests me, we haven an iPad at home and that's it. I don't need iOS for my phone and from what I can tell I'd love Android.jonnybryce said:If you're interested in Android or really want to jump in I recommend it. It's a great os that allows more power to the user on tons of great hardware. It all depends on what you value. If you like to tinker with things and make your phone yours, if you prefer a certain carrier or manufacturer, keyboard, etc than it's great OS. If you just want to compare OSes it's a solid option but doesn't win any awards for usability.
There aren't any "problems" with Gingerbread itself, it's the best version of Android yet. For people who have been aboard the Android train for a while the issues are more with what it doesn't do. It was supposed to/rumored to be a UI upgrade as anyone with eyes knows Android is a bit ugly and inconsistent. It ended up changing the shape of some buttons. Woohoo.
Other areas like copy and paste remain a product of Android's unofficial motto rather than a demonstration of the future - it's good enough. It gets the job done. Copying and pasting was rather random on Android (before Gingerbread). It was done different ways in every app and some apps, even official Google ones, wouldn't let you select text at all (while others like SMS only let you copy whole messages at a time and pieces you wanted). Gingerbread added anchors like iOS and webOS but you still activate them in a random manner.
If you watch a hands on video of Gingerbread or Android and like what you see I recommend it, especially if you want to dive into customizing your phone or doing cool things like having notifications sent to your desktop, sending files to your phone wirelessly, managing your SD card through wifi, etc. There's a lot of awesome possibilities here but it comes at the expense of some core UI elements.
edit: To be clear it's not that having to copy and paste a few different ways is enough to disappoint with Android, that's one example. Another that really bothers me is how Android handles bookmarks - it throws them all in section and reorganizes them based on recently used so that ends up being a disaster and quite useless. I could give plenty of other small examples that tip the scale from "I can do amazing things at the cost of some basic annoyances" to "There's a lot of basic annoyances here and I really don't care to do these crazy things much anymore." It comes down to what you value and what you can tolerate.
Meh. Seemed OK. An awful lot of time was spent talking about being able to visualize and access a recent apps menue with a touch of a button. Sure, it's a great feature but that's something LauncherPro already doesgcubed said:Watch the Duarte interview on engadget for the future of android its a really good interview with the guy now responsible for ui
True, but I think what Matias was getting at was the fact that there are programs out there doing that in a sense which shows that the OS as a whole is lacking.Mercury Fred said:Meh. Seemed OK. An awful lot of time was spent talking about being able to visualize and access a recent apps menue with a touch of a button. Sure, it's a great feature but that's something LauncherPro already does![]()
Your gmail account.MNC said:By the way do bought apps tie to an account or email (gmail preferably)? And am I able to sync stuff?