![Banging head against wall :bangwall:](./images/smilies/1892.gif)
Duh, thank you.
No they don't, that is exactly my point. The techy people like the choice because they understand the underlying concepts. Ordinary people, who just want a phone that works the way they're used to that type of phone working don't like it. If you tell them that it's an android phone they will expect it to work like an android phone. They will not expect it to be missing large parts of what it means to be an android phone, nor will they expect it to work in a completely different way.Reliant121 wrote:The problem with Ubuntu is that it isnt working. Android just is. Its very quickly taking sales shares from the two highest sellers, Grandpa symbian and Middle Manager Blackberry. The wide choices are exactly that. Choice of budget, choice of quality, choice of features. People seem to like that.
Because it's the big new thing. People only know the machine they have. The problem will come in a year or two's time when they try and replace the machine with a new one and it's completely different and perhaps will be missing features that their own phone had, just because they where troublesome for the network provider. It's simpler for the provider to simple disable the feature than improve the network to cope.Reliant121 wrote:Perhaps you are right. Whatever the reason, sales figures are still increasing and that has to stand for something.
Your slip of the pen is very telling, Androids indeed. Many different ones. and that's the problem.Reliant121 wrote:Perhaps you are right. Whatever the reason, sales figures are still increasing and that has to stand for something. It used to be people all wanted iPhones and it IS chsnging, whethet you will admit it or not. I cant back that up because, evidently, I csnt gauge the opinions of millions but from the last time sales figures showed up it was going Androids way.
I'm sorry, but did you just say there is no fragmentation except were there isReliant121 wrote:This is true. I don't know, I have never owned a non-sim Free android phone. For us, there is no app fragmentation but the carriers often dictate update points. Unless you're Orange, where they often install entire skins as an option.
Mobile hotspot is available on Verizon and Sprint for $30/month extra on your bill, where T Mobile has it for free on the Samsung Vibrant. I don't think AT&T has it at all.Nickswitz wrote:Ian isn't talking about the hardware companies now, he's talking about the carriers, who have been the determining factor of a lot of thing on Android, you can't run unsigned apps if you are on AT&T, any other carrier you can, you can't use Skype unless you are on Verizon Wireless, you can't use the Mobile hotspot unless you are on Verizon or I want to say Sprint, but I may be wrong. This is US based of course.
The Carriers determine what is on Android, as opposed to Windows Phone 7 and the iPhone, even the iPad. So Android has a serious amount of fragmentation.