mrspeedmaster
Android Expert
Also why are you resizing the photos?
Let see. 3,000 photos at 20 megabyte each. Also shot in raw. Almost a terabyte and a half of photos. They also take about a minute to open each file in Android's gallery app.
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Also why are you resizing the photos?
Also why are you resizing the photos?
Let see. 3,000 photos at 20 megabyte each. Also shot in raw. Almost a terabyte and a half of photos. They also take about a minute to open each file in Android's gallery app.
Because it wouldn't be durable enough; I would've thought that was fairly obvious...If it was purely for "form" why not use "regular glass"?...

As I've already said, a metal alloy, probably the same as already used in other parts of the iPhone4's enclosure....What is your suggestion for alternative materials?...
Given that I've never said any such thing, quite the opposite in fact, I will assume that either you're just looking to argue to the point of making things up, or not really understanding what you're reading; either way, there is no point discussing it further....Given that you think there is no differentiation in glass manufacturing...
Canon cameras produce 2 versions of the files. A RAW and a high res JPEG. So it is more like 6,000 files for 3K images. 20 Megabyte RAW file and 8-10 meg 'preview' JPEG file. Then rest of the difference is probably due all the video files that my camera produces. I shoot with a Canon SLR and all the files are in DCIM directories. I would need to go thru 40-50 directories to remove those .mp4 files.Umm... where are you getting a terabyte and a half?
Maybe I'm missing something, but 3000x20Mb = 60000Mb = 58.59375Gb = 0.057220458984375Tb....
Or even if you use decimal instead of binary
60000Mb = 60Gb = .06Tb
Canon cameras produce 2 versions of the files. A RAW and a high res JPEG. So it is more like 6,000 files for 3K images. 20 Megabyte RAW file and 8-10 meg 'preview' JPEG file. Then rest of the difference is probably due all the video files that my camera produces. I shoot with a Canon SLR and all the files are in DCIM directories. I would need to go thru 40-50 directories to remove those .mp4 files.
1.5 terabyte is being a bit generous, it might as well be more than that. The point is to find a way to manage and copy those files to the phone. And there are no 512MB microSDH or 1 TB sdhc cards on the market.
You pretty much have to use an image management tool. None of which work with Android in creating multi-albums.
I also want to say I am not in a unique situation. I am new parent. I am in a parent group with 30 other dads. About 20 of us use dSLRs or HD cameras. Each of us have taken more than a terabyte of photos/video of our kids per year. This is average joe kind of stuff. If you are a new dad, you might understand. Having a phone that allows you to have multiple albums and easy way to copy/organize is a big selling point. I can take about 120 shots per birthday party.


It was stuff like this that made me listen to Ken Rockwell and stop shooting RAW altogether. I shoot purely jpg now and I haven't regretted it one bit.
If the guys on this forum think the Android Vs Apple arguments are bad wait until they see a RAW Vs jpg one![]()
Canon cameras produce 2 versions of the files. A RAW and a high res JPEG. So it is more like 6,000 files for 3K images. 20 Megabyte RAW file and 8-10 meg 'preview' JPEG file. Then rest of the difference is probably due all the video files that my camera produces. I shoot with a Canon SLR and all the files are in DCIM directories. I would need to go thru 40-50 directories to remove those .mp4 files.
1.5 terabyte is being a bit generous, it might as well be more than that. The point is to find a way to manage and copy those files to the phone. And there are no 512MB microSDH or 1 TB sdhc cards on the market.
You pretty much have to use an image management tool. None of which work with Android in creating multi-albums.
I also want to say I am not in a unique situation. I am new parent. I am in a parent group with 30 other dads. About 20 of us use dSLRs or HD cameras. Each of us have taken more than a terabyte of photos/video of our kids per year. This is average joe kind of stuff. If you are a new dad, you might understand. Having a phone that allows you to have multiple albums and easy way to copy/organize is a big selling point. I can take about 120 shots per birthday party.
Not true. Iphone, you can use Photobucket, flickr, and some other cloud services.. They also upload via the cloud. They have native free apps in the app store if you want to do the "cloud" method. Also, it is not smart to upload terabytes of hi-res images to cloud services.The iPhone is too stuck on the desktop paradigm while Android is setting us up for the cloud. Ironically this is where Jobs wants to go but its Google thats actually doing the work. I wish HTC would get in gear and put the Picasa upload back.
Because it wouldn't be durable enough; I would've thought that was fairly obvious
As I've already said, a metal alloy, probably the same as already used in other parts of the iPhone4's enclosure.
Given that I've never said any such thing, quite the opposite in fact, I will assume that either you're just looking to argue to the point of making things up, or not really understanding what you're reading; either way, there is no point discussing it further.
Lol. I can understand where are you coming from if you just want to take casual pictures. I shoot RAW because I do a lot of post-processing/retouching. I got to out-do the other parents w/ children's picts.

Oh dear!
If they used a metal alloy, or plastic for the rear and it was dropped and scratched it would still be perfectly usable(assuming the phone still worked), but I wouldn't want to drop it, shatter the back and carry on using the phone while holding all those shards in my hand!
Not true. Iphone, you can use Photobucket, flickr, and some other cloud services.. They also upload via the cloud. They have native free apps in the app store if you want to do the "cloud" method. Also, it is not smart to upload terabytes of hi-res images to cloud services.
Also, is it me, or do the buttons seem missing in this pic?
how does packing a ridged shell full of hardware, making it heavier, make that less likley to happen...
the screen is still the first impact point...
how do we know apple doesnt lie about their products?
how do we know the news is true?
how do we know inflation is correct?
how do we know the value of a
how do we know apple doesnt lie about their products?
how do we know the news is true?
how do we know inflation is correct?
how do we know the value of a
No, don't make such a blanket statement. Froyo still lacks many enterprise features that still makes Blackberry, iPhone, Windows Mobile bigger in market share in that order for those reasons.
Just go to Google's own feature request site for Android. All the top requests are for enterprise level connectivity/management stuff that is standard and taken for granted on Blackberry, iPhone, WM.
Companies that buys 100s of handset make a bigger impact than people like you and me.

Not when the supposedly hardware encrypted iPhone 3gs can be plugged into a machine running ubuntu via usb and the ENTIRE FILESYSTEM CAN BE READ.
Let me repeat that, simply by plugging an encrypted iPhone 3gs into an ubuntu box, you can read EVERYTHING in the filesystem. Call logs, contacts, email, files, music, pictures, video, mms, sms. Its all out in the open.
That's because it isn't encrypted. It just has the option of having a passcode on the lock screen. iOS 4 will have enterprise security features though.
Not when the supposedly hardware encrypted iPhone 3gs can be plugged into a machine running ubuntu via usb and the ENTIRE FILESYSTEM CAN BE READ.
Let me repeat that, simply by plugging an encrypted iPhone 3gs into an ubuntu box, you can read EVERYTHING in the filesystem. Call logs, contacts, email, files, music, pictures, video, mms, sms. Its all out in the open.
We currently allow Blackberry, Windows Mobile, Palm Treo devices.
Android devices are in the final stages of testing with the Moto Droid, Nexus One, HTC Incredible looking like they're going to pass.
Android devices are in the final stages of testing with the Moto Droid, Nexus One, HTC Incredible looking like they're going to pass.
You can do the same sort of damage on Windows and Android.
iFuse (as you mentioned Ubuntu) can mount a file system. Can you installed unsigned iPhone apps? No. How easy it is to unpack the contacts db? It is fairly easy to do it to Android.
As for you contacts, your point?
I can run this in the shell of my computer to pull your Android contacts. You know it is written in sqlite3?
./adb shell
# export PATH=/data/busybox:$PATH
export PATH=/data/busybox:$PATH
# find data -name "*.db" -print
find data -name "*.db" -print
data/data/com.google.android.providers.contacts/databases/contacts.db
data/data/com.google.android.providers.googleapps/databases/accounts.db
By the same token I can do much far more damage to Android Device without even plugging it in.
I can send a malicious sel-signed .apk via email. I can SCP a file from a remote location onto the phone filesystem.
I do it all the time; I send myself custom apps I've written.
I can also use a pc,mac or linux to install trojan .apks that get contacts, geo and send that remotely. Took me to 2 minutes to a sign a self certificate
With known root tools, you can easily run InstantRoot.apks.
Your organization probably doesn't run enterprise features like WPA2 with EAP encryption or Cisco IPSEC group authentication.