Awesome! I'll copy this later as reminder to myself to try. Thanks again, seriously![]()
Your welcome. I was an email admin for almost a decade (and ran BBS's before that
Awesome! I'll copy this later as reminder to myself to try. Thanks again, seriously![]()
Yeah, just when you thought you'd made it as clear and obvious as possible there's always one who'll give you a face/palm moment. LOL!Your welcome. I was an email admin for almost a decade (and ran BBS's before that) so I had to deal with this crap all the time. Users - sigh...
Tell that to my Note 4 that would randomly reboot at anywhere from 30%-70% due to a degraded battery, and my OG Moto X that will reboot at 40%. Until I swapped the battery, the Note 4 would never enter battery saver mode unless it displayed <20%, which at that time, it would shut down.
That has nothing to do with "status". That's just an asshole with a shitty phone and/or bad hearing.its all the illusion of status. just like the loud talker on the cell phone in a public venue
...said no one, ever.or the "look at me ive got a starbucks brand coffee cup in my hand"
I bet you it probably didn't reboot, but just turned off. Then you'd turn it on. There is a difference between reboot and powered off. Majority of your Android devices simply turn off with a degraded battery. iPhone devices do pretty much exactly the same thing.
And if you live in the US, the overwhelming majority of people have iPhones.
But by all means, buy a less useful phone and isolate yourself from others because you think that makes you unique and not a sheep.
When I said "reboot", I meant reboot. Not shutdown and me turning it back on, but reboot. Android phones can and do reboot with faulty/degraded batteries. I've had several Android phones, and have seen such many times.
You get everything from random app crashes to reboots and shutdowns.
In fact, Apple is losing to Samsung alone.
Losing what? There are many numbers that can be quoted - the amount of revenue per user is what manufacturers and everyone else in the ecosystem really cares about. The biggest winner in Android is Google with ad revenue. It shouldn't be a surprise, that's why they created and "gave away" Android. As a phone manufacturer or independent programmer?
Before the iPhone all Android pre-production units were very hard to tell apart from Blackberry's which dominated the time before the iPhone. I suspect Android working more like the iPhone and less like a Blackberry is a good thing for most people.
Then the iPhone came out and Google went "oh shit" and completely redesigned it.
You must not remember this.
View attachment 66554
Yes, that was the original design for Android. Note how it looked very much like a Blackberry. Then the iPhone came out and Google went "oh shit" and completely redesigned it.
If you really want to go down that road, the iPhone had many similarities to the PocketPC that I owned before it debuted.
lol - I had a pocket PC too (should have never let them swap my awesome HTC for a Treo when I broke my HTC - Palm's phone dialer and other utils were complete garbage compared to HTC) and the similarities between pocket PC and the iPhone is the two had something called a GUI. On the pocket PCs but it was barely useful for doing email (Blackberry ruled here) and worthless for web or anything else (WEP anyone?) and in trying to cram the desktop metaphor on a mobile device a good 1/3 of the screen was wasted in unnecessary window dressing. Safari on the iPhone was like nothing else and existed a full year before the first Android phone shipped - it was the "real" internet, not some watered down interpretation. I waited my contract out before getting an iPhone and felt pretty stupid for waiting after I got it. Paying extra for data was a waste by comparison. At least the second generation iPhone hardware as a dramatic improvement over the original so I had that going for me.
There's similar and then there's similar.
Safari is a joke, what does that really have to do with anything? Safari is a browser and it isn't even a particularly good one.
If you really had a pocket PC phone from that era you wouldn't consider Safari a joke.