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Comment They are right (Score 5, Interesting) 333

Regarding this line:

>> "Note that the Galaxy S runs the same hardware as the Nexus S, which is already receiving the Android 4.0 update."

Yes, the Nexus S has ICS; I'm running it on my Nexus S, and it's fantastic. However, you can really, really feel the fact that the phone only has 512 MB of RAM. If you open a memory intensive app (web browser, for example), pretty much everything else gets swapped out; when you next press Home, you have to wait a second or two for the launcher to be restarted, or worse, for the keyboard to load.

Since TouchWiz would add even more bloat, I can totally see how 512 MB just won't cut it.

Comment Re:With the end of unlimited data plans...? (Score 2) 267

On the keyboard note, I find that with SwiftKey for Android, touch-screen keyboard complaints are a thing of the past. I can tap out a full length, properly written (no txt abbreviations) message in no time, with little effort. Granted, I was never a BlackBerry user for more than a few days, so I can't compare directly, but I think I can type on my Galaxy S just as fast as anybody with a BB.

Comment Re:don't do evil (Score 3, Informative) 186

You have to do more than just claim that something is evil. You have to make an actual point about why this is evil.

Put yourself in their shoes. You're a business, and want to operate in some jurisdiction. They have rules you don't like. You can either a) abide by the rules, b) choose not to operate there, or c) campaign to have the rules changed. All of these area reasonable options, none of them are evil, and Google chose B.

Stop being so alarmist.

Comment Re:Just for rioting? Seriously? (Score 5, Insightful) 397

Wow, how do you mange to sound more like a dick with each word you write?

You realize this isn't some vigilante man hunt, right? It's just people looking at pics of crimes in progress and seeing if they recognize anyone. If they do, they report them to the police and let justice take its course.

As to this:

"At least rioters are just violent pricks and adrenaline-fueled idiots; you guys sound like the sort of vengeful, soulless libertarians who would shoot a man rather than let him walk away with your TV"

I don't even know what to say. People smashing property for no reason are worse than people trying to defend their own property. Go fuck yourself.

Comment Possible Solution (Score 1) 91

Without having to resort to reviewing third party code like Apple does, I see one possible way in which Google could solve this problem without dedicating too many people to it. My solution is this:

By default, a developer account on the Market is "unverified" - when people try to install apps from an unverified account, they receive a huge, scary warning that states that this application could contain malware, please make sure you trust the author, etc.

To become "verified", a developer must contact Google personally and verify their identity, including full contact details (phone number, address, etc.), and sign a form that states something to the effect of "You are liable for all malicious code published through this account, even if your account is hacked." Punishment for publishing malware could include a financial penalty, and possibly criminal charges depending on what your malware did and what jurisdiction you live in.

Comment Re:Fair enough. (Score 1) 1251

It would depend on the kind of ID:

Unacceptable case: "The earth is billions of years old, but God directly created all of its creatures" - evidence contradicts this.

Acceptable case: "The earth is billions of years old, and God created the Universe and its finely tuned laws that allowed evolution to create the variety of life that we see today"

Comment Re:This could be good (Score 1) 63

Just buy the phone outright. Consider the following cost breakdown, which I did for myself:

TMobile Vibrant from eBay: $500
Wind service: $35 + tax for voice/text/data = $39.20 after tax
Three years of service and a phone: $1911.2

Subsidized Vibrant from Telus: $200 w/ 3 year contract
Similar service plan, after hidden fees and taxes: approx. $55-$60 per month
Three years of service and a phone: $2180-$2360

Wind wins, even with a crappy in-store phone selection.

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