Count me in, then. I tried CM 6.1.2 on my Droid and hated it. First off, there are no clear directions for installing the google apps. Second, it ran like shit and I could never watch a video with any program without skipping frames like crazy and losing audio sync.
I went to Liquid...
You're overthinking it. Just do regular watercooling, do it right and put the radiator in the lizard cage if you want, or just direct the airflow from the radiator fans into the cage.
Palm died a while ago. Waiting on new WebOS products is a fool's errand. They won't get the market acceptance and apps of Android or iOS at this point.
I had an EVO, and when I blamed multi-tasking for its poor battery life, a lot of geeks told me that Android puts apps to sleep when they get backgrounded.
So, which is it? Do they stay running (multi-tasking) in the background and kill battery life, or do they go to sleep (like iOS)?
It really depends on the phone and what you want in the plan. For example, if you want lots of data, texting and lots of calling but don't want the best phone ever, Sprint's EPRP is unbeatable at $60. With the EVO and Epic though, it jumps up to $70.
If you are happy with Windows Mobile...
I don't know how much you know about SERO from back in the day, but that's BS. You're making shit up. SERO was public. EPRP is public. If Sprint didn't want people to sign up, they wouldn't have distributed the [email protected] and [email protected] emails.
If I pay more to VZW or...
They required Everything plans for the Pre, which was the first non-Instinct phone to require them. There was a lot of bitching at the time. I was in a similar situation. I'd have bought the fuck out of the Pre if it had been available on SERO.
Now I'd be happy to get the EVO on regular...
The $10 extra plan kills it for me. I was ready to drop two SERO lines for this baby, and now Sprint has dashed my hopes. Now I will proceed to drop Sprint. By which I mean cling to SERO for dear life and assess my options when SERO is finally killed off.
I guess my g/f is getting a brand new...
Well, the iPod touch and iPhone both run the same apps and most apps are compatible with both platforms.
This news item is targeted at developers. I don't think the makers of Tap Tap Revenge particularly care whether you buy their app and run it on an iTouch or an iPhone as long as they get...
You couldn't start up the iPod app and then open Google maps in Safari? I would think you could do that. Both of those apps are multi-tasking enabled in iPhone OS. You could even open up the Maps app with the iPod app running, which I don't believe is multi-tasking enabled.
Premier customers get an upgrade every year, and this starts 6 months after you get on an eligible plan. How long have you been premier and when was your last upgrade?
Also a Q9c can be had for very cheap nowadays.