MSUgEEk
Android Expert
After watching Oblivion, I am greatly disappointed.
Know what I'm disappointed in after watching it last night? The office. This Jim and Pam story is not making me happy.
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After watching Oblivion, I am greatly disappointed.
After watching Oblivion, I am greatly disappointed.
Yeah, same here. Would also definitely be interested to hear why the movie was disappointing.Wanted to see that one. Why are you disappointed?After watching Oblivion, I am greatly disappointed.
Wanted to see that one. Why are you disappointed?
Know what I'm disappointed in after watching it last night? The office. This Jim and Pam story is not making me happy.
agreed
Titanium Backup
Yep, saw that last night chief. I think I still might wait until io to purchase just in case google releases a nexus google TV box.
Look: we know many on Verizon aren't happy that the carrier has revealed plans to lengthen its upgrade intervals right as smartphone update season is hitting full stride. However, there may be a consolation prize. As of April 21st, "some devices" in its smartphone range, not just the existing tablets, will qualify for a Device Payment Plan that spreads out the full costs over the course of a year, letting those who crave the latest mobile hardware (presumably, you) upgrade without either having to sign a contract or pay everything up front. Sounds like a very UnCarrier thing to do, doesn't it? Not quite, unfortunately. The carrier tells us that these payments sit on top of existing service plans, not inside them -- the base service rate won't go down in year two. T-Mobile will remain the better bargain for anyone constantly replacing handsets, then, but those on Verizon will at least have a degree of freedom.
In addition to the dour news that Verizon will be strictly enforcing a 24-month upgrade cycle, the company is extending a small olive branch. Customers who want to get a new phone before their contract is up (or, presumably, anytime) will be able to do so without paying the full device cost up front. Instead, Verizon will let consumers sign up for a "Device Payment Plan" that will break up the full retail price into monthly payments over the course of a year. A Verizon spokesperson tells The Verge that smartphones and tablets costing more than $349.99 will be eligible, but there's also a $24 "finance charge, billed at $2 each month."
The plan was originally leaked by Droid-Life earlier today, and it's mainly an extension of a program Verizon already offered for tablets. As Engadget notes, the plan is completely separate from the device subsidy costs built-into Verizon's standard contract costs. That makes Verizon's device payment plan a different beast entirely from T-Mobile's "Uncarrier" plans, which separate device subsidies from plan costs. Still, it could make upgrading early a little easier (if a little more expensive in the long run) for those who don't want to pay full retail price at the register.
I WILL be finding an alternative to Verizon this fall.

Throttling.![]()
I live in a marginal 3G area at best anyway.Still havent found a reason, at least not any that would justify NOT to cut my wireless bill in HALF.I live in a marginal 3G area at best anyway.

I think DC is slated to be one of the first with LTE from T-Mo, but aside from that, I assume it has pretty good HSPA+ coverage anyway.
Just need to get the wife on board!
Yes. I do this all the time. In fact, I can even share a gogo connection with my wife. The limitation is that only one device at a time can be connected. When a new device logs on, the other one is automatically logged off.So anyone have a suggestion for what I would like to do?
Can I go on a plane and hook my phone up to GoGo wifi, and then use that connection by bluetooth or wifi to my laptop, and then to my tablet when the laptop battery dies? I paid for the wifi once for the whole flight and believe that I should be able to use it on both my devices in sequence (not simultaneously of course). Is this legit under TOS (if not, then mea culpa) and do-able?