Jailbreaking is easy and allows you to customize and widget very similar to the Eris.
See you can customize and run non-App store apps.... if you are willing to risk Apple Bricking your phone.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
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Jailbreaking is easy and allows you to customize and widget very similar to the Eris.
As I said, obviousness becomes clear with hindsight. I seem to recall that, prior to the iPhone, IIRC all smartphones (Windows Mobile, Palm OS, Symbian, etc.) with toucscreens unlocked not with a touch gesture like that, but with some sort of tapped (or typed) passcode or PIN number.
It may be that this particular patent will be invalidated, but neither you nor I appear to have the professional expertise to declare that with any sort of authority. We'll see what happens.
Actually, it will be interesting to see how the Supreme Court rules in the Bilski case. That should be coming in a few months. This may make these sorts of cases far harder to prosecute depending on how the court rules.
You can add up all of the Android manufactures still behind Apple in sales. I was just pointing out that even the so called "iPhone" killer is severely lagging in sales.
That latter claim has been put rest and found untrue. Check out the HTC Incredible thread some time, as it's been covered there ad nauseam. Google will have a CDMA version of the N1 available for use on Verizon's Network soon (supposedly), but it's been confirmed that it WILL NOT be available through Verizon - either online or in their stores. Support for it will still come through Google, which is a bassackward strategy as far as most are concerned.Verizon is selling HTC devices and has plans to sell the Nexus.
I'm not sure that's true. Android gained almost 5% market share (through sales) and Apple only gained 1.21% market share. Unless there are 2 million iPhone users who upgraded to the 3GS in 4th quarter 09, then the Android OS outsold the iPhone.
Apple sees 98% iPhone growth as Microsoft, Google prepare for battle
By Neil Hughes
Published: 10:15 AM EST
Worldwide smartphone shipments stormed back last quarter with 37.2 percent in growth, and Apple's iPhone led the way with a 97.9 percent year-over-year surge in shipments. But the real coming battle in the mobile market, according to one analyst, lies between Microsoft and Google.
Analyst Charlie Wolf with Needham & Company provided a breakdown of the expanding smartphone market, which in the holiday quarter rebounded from just 5.6 percent growth over the previous four quarters. While Apple saw the greatest success, Nokia's shipments also jumped 37.3 percent and Research in Motion saw a spike of 41.2 percent.
While the recession has softened and the smartphone market is recovering, Wolf is now looking to the future and the fiercely competitive handset business.
"Events since the beginning of 2010 have turned the market into a land grab not dissimilar to the California gold rush in the 1800s," Wolf wrote. "Everyone is chasing the iPhone which has taken on an aura that far exceeds the phone's market share. The aura stems from the disruptive design and functionality of the first iPhone, and it has been reinforced by the remarkable success of the iPhone App Store."
The analyst said he believes the smartphone market has turned into a "land grab" that is "virtually certain" to lead to a brutal battle between Microsoft and Google. He said Microsoft's Windows Phone 7 Series won't kill the iPhone, which exists in a class by itself, but it will be a potential "Android killer." Windows Phone 7 Series, Wolf said, is evidence that Microsoft "finally gets it."
"Microsoft has delivered on the necessary condition for success -- a smartphone operating system that should enable it to play in the same sandbox with Apple, Google and BlackBerry," he wrote. "We've frequently criticized Microsoft's inept efforts in delivering a user-friendly smartphone operating system. Such criticisms are now in the past."
The real coming smartphone battle, he said, lies between Google's Android mobile operating system and Windows Phone 7. Android has a few advantages, in that it licensees do not have to pay any fees, and it allows manufacturers to differentiate their phones from other Android devices with custom interfaces. But Android also has no presence on the enterprise market, where Microsoft and its entrenched position with Windows will play to the Redmond, Wash., company's advantage.
"A major battle between Microsoft and Google to win the hearts and minds of the smartphone vendors who are building devices for both platforms appears inevitable."
Microsoft is also expected to extend its new Windows Phone 7 mobile operating system to non-phone devices such as the rumored Zune HD2 portable media player. The first phones running Windows Phone 7 Series are expected to arrive by this holiday.
Wolf also spoke of the success BlackBerry has found "out of the limelight," and the struggles faced by Palm despite the company's "superior platform."
"We have little confidence in a material acceleration in Pre sales because Palm simply does not have the financial resources to market its devices at a level comparable to its competitors," he wrote. "But miracles do occur occasionally."
The problem with articles like these are that they are based on the most fundamental definition of statitistics - "Here's the answer I want. now, go find the data/argument I need to proof my answer true"
Dig around, and you will find at least one article from an "expert" someone claiming their favorite (read "they paid me") device outsold all others by a certain margin.
And, they will all be true!! Problem is, they will be based on data such as "when sold with *** accessorie", or "when sold through **** retailer", or "as sold to persons who prefer mustard on their hot dogs rather than ketchup", etc, etc, ad naseum....
mobimop,
It is true that the iPhone is doing better year over year. However, since the droid came out it is doing worse, quarter over quarter.
These are quarterly results, they sold MORE iPhones for the SAME QUARTER last year. So how are they doing worse if they sold MORE?![]()
These are quarterly results, they sold MORE iPhones for the SAME QUARTER last year. So how are they doing worse if they sold MORE?![]()
I think that the point is that the Droid was the first Android phone sold with a massive marketing campaign, and it came out at the start of the last quarter of 2009. According to comscore, Android phones not only had a higher percentage growth quarter over quarter than the iPhone, it appears possible that there were actually more Android phones sold in total during the last quarter than iPhones (though I doubt it.)
We know that Apple sold 4.3 million iPhones in the quarter.
It is difficult to analyze whether this means anything for a single quarter, though, as Apple tends to get huge quarterly sales in the third quarter, as they have historically released new iPhones only once each year, and people tend to get them then. During the third quarter, Apple sold 7.4 million iPhones.It may look at first glance that they lost business quarter over quarter, but they actually gained market share with 3.1 million fewer phones sold.
I think that what the change in share means is that many of those4.3 millioniPhone owners were upgrading iPhones that they already owned, while almost all of the new Android sales were the first Android phones for their buyers.
It was actually 8.7 million iPhones. I was reading the wrong year's data.
Obviously, they gained a small amount of market share while selling 1.3 million more.
I think that there are still a lot of iPhone buyers in Q4 who upgraded from older models, while I'd guess that far more Android buyers were buying their first Android phones. (There is no data for that, but it does seem pretty feasible, since the iPhone was introduced in 2007 and many users upgrade to new phones after their two year contracts expire, and Android phones have only been around since Q3 2008.)
By the way, iPhone year over year comparison of Q3 to Q4:
Q308: 6.9 million (introduction of iPhone 3G in July)
Q408: 4.4 million (of course, the financial crisis hit this quarter)
Q309: 7.4 million (introduction of 3GS in June)
Q409: 8.7 million
I'm thinking that Apple is probably pleased with that sales growth compared with the prior year, even if it is to existing iPhone customers and led to marginal increases in share.
I think a lot of people expected that. Well, maybe HTC will just end up paying Nokia.
Palm are the ones that can destroy Apple, just need to grow a pair. I saw something on engadget or gizmodo on my twitter feed about Google possibly buying Palm (who reported huge Quarterly loses). Now, that would be BAD ASS.
Palm are the ones that can destroy Apple, just need to grow a pair. I saw something on engadget or gizmodo on my twitter feed about Google possibly buying Palm (who reported huge Quarterly loses). Now, that would be BAD ASS.
The problem is that if the iPhone is only available on 1 carrier here. If It goes to multiple carries, watch it easily over-take droid. If they are stupid and keep exclusive to AT&T, then yes, Android will ultimately win out since it's on all carriers.