Fjolle
Member
There isn't any Windows Phone which is in any place to "jab" Android. If Nokia thinks they can take on Android they will have another thought coming really soon.
Lol
There isn't any Windows Phone which is in any place to "jab" Android. If Nokia thinks they can take on Android they will have another thought coming really soon.
There isn't any Windows Phone which is in any place to "jab" Android. If Nokia thinks they can take on Android they will have another thought coming really soon.
I don't get why an adroid user such as yourself is so insecure that you have to troll the Windows thread every day. Windows isn't going to rise up overnight and make your phone irrelevant.I won't waste anyone's time any further in this thread,
There isn't any Windows Phone which is in any place to "jab" Android. If Nokia thinks they can take on Android they will have another thought coming really soon.
LOL, if WP7 is such a non-threat, then why're you always in this thread spouting off like a drone and posting links to posts that have been proven false? You're such a loser.
What insult? You said you were done with the thread yet you can't stay away. Nothing insulting about stating you have some insecurity issues causing you to be unable to commit to what you've previously said. Someone secure with themselves would stay away from the thread after stating they have no desire to be here. I just don't get where it's coming from, Windows Phone is a near dead platform at the moment. Why do you feel the need to defend android against it?Ah, I was hoping we'd get to personal insults soon. It shows who's truly mature enough on the Internet to have a discussion and who isn't pretty clearly.
Need links.
Also the 710 is in no place to "jab" anyone. Esp. When there is the 800.
Ah, I was hoping we'd get to personal insults soon. It shows who's truly mature enough on the Internet to have a discussion and who isn't pretty clearly.
This is why you are considered a joke."The price of freedom is eternal vigilance."
- Thomas Jefferson
"Freedom isn't free."
- Walter Hitchcock
"So I ask you: do you want to be safe, or do you want to be free?"
- Louis Sachar (Sideways Stories from Wayside School)
You can be safe in the walled garden. You'll have to do as Ballmer says, when he says you can't run these apps at the same time, you can't. When he says you can't have a screen resolution higher than that, you can't. When he says you can't have an external storage solution where you can remove the external storage without formatting the whole phone, you can't. When he says that you can't have custom ringtones, you can't. If you're comfortable with someone at Microsoft telling you how you can and can't use your phone, then I suppose you should choose to be safe. You might as well get an iPhone if you're going to submit to the tyranny of the walled garden.
Alternatively, you can be free. You can do what you want, when you want. You can put anything on your home screen, you can run any browser you want, you can use any music player or video player you like. Sometimes it will be a bit dangerous. Your phone might crash for no good reason. If you open too many apps at once, you might make your phone slow down. Some of your apps might kill your battery, and if you have a really huge HD screen and LTE you will definitely kill your battery if you don't know what you are doing. You might actually have to manage all your apps once you've installed a few hundred because there are so many to choose from which are useful. If you're not careful, you'll put a dozen gigabytes of music on your microSD card and not remember what is all on there, so you'll have to pull it out of the phone and stick it into a PC to manage it. Then you'll start cutting out 30 seconds of your own music and making your own custom ringtones and you'll subject your friends to 30 seconds of the worst pop song which is currently popular. Please don't make a custom Justin Bieber ringtone, unless you want someone on the subway to stab you.
Yeah, you can be safe, or you can be free. Ultimately, the choice is yours. I choose to be free, so I have a Galaxy Nexus.
After the controversial Smoked by Windows Phone uploading picture to Facebook dispute yesterday, Ben the PC Guy offered own WMPowerUser reader, Aaron (AlienSix) a rematch. Aaron accepted the offer and returned to the Microsoft CES booth.
Ben updated the rules of the contest, and declared that the finish line this time around would be when the user clicks the Post button. This means that the contest does not include the actual data upload, and does not include the loading screen after the user clicks the Post button.
Aaron informed us that the HTC Titan beat his Samsung Galaxy S2 by literally under a second.
And the funny thing about that is you just KNOW that he practised a shitload of times before taking that test again.Awww. That 2011 dual-core 1GB RAM peasant Android phone was soooo close beating the majestic and stunning single-core 512 MB RAM Windows Phone. I'm sure the Windows Phone will lose, once they get quad-cores and 2 GB RAM.
And the funny thing about that is you just KNOW that he practised a shitload of times before taking that test again.
The poor safe windows phone users at the mercy of ballmer don't seem too much trouble stacking up against the majestic free birds of the android community.
This is why you are considered a joke.
Awww. That 2011 dual-core 1GB RAM peasant Android phone was soooo close beating the majestic and stunning single-core 512 MB RAM Windows Phone. I'm sure the Windows Phone will lose, once they get quad-cores and 2 GB RAM.
Ben is just one guy and he's at CES all day doing a variety of things. But hey, even if they both practiced equally, what does it say when the WP7 still won?Who were they racing against? I'm assuming the WP user had plenty of practice since, you know, it was their contest.
Anyway, you guys have an Android basher in the Android OT...not a big deal since no one responds to his attempts at getting a rise. You should try that.
You know, I use the Facebook for Android app daily, and it's a really terrible app. I would hate to burst your bubble by noting that Facebook themselves develop the Android app, but the Windows Phone app is developed by MS. But I guess you win this round. I freely admit that if the only thing you do with your smartphone is post to Facebook, then Windows Phone is clearly superior to Android.
So what you're saying is, you don't have anything intelligent to respond to my post with. Good to know.
You know, I use the Facebook for Android app daily, and it's a really terrible app. I would hate to burst your bubble by noting that Facebook themselves develop the Android app, but the Windows Phone app is developed by MS. But I guess you win this round. I freely admit that if the only thing you do with your smartphone is post to Facebook, then Windows Phone is clearly superior to Android.
You've been posting in another thread specifically to justify your purchase of a phone and tell other people that their needs and wants are wrong because they're not the same as yours.Ah, I was hoping we'd get to personal insults soon. It shows who's truly mature enough on the Internet to have a discussion and who isn't pretty clearly.
I don't like where this is heading :-/
I like this idea.Anyway, you guys have an Android basher in the Android OT...not a big deal since no one responds to his attempts at getting a rise. You should try that.
Sigh.
Sounds like Sprint's management doesn't read its own user reviews.
I like this idea.
Isn't it one of those management games where you set things up, leave for a few hours and play again?
"Verizon and AT&T don't want seven stock ICS devices on their shelves," he said, insisting that he "has to make money" and that there simply isn't a way to profit on a device that isn't differentiated. "The vast majority of the changes we make to the OS are to meet the requirements that carriers have."
The 900 is the first Windows phone that's gotten buzz from people I know irl. I just got a call from my sister asking about it, and two friends brought it up yesterday.
Competitions like this are inherently skewed though. It really only shows the rationale of the creator of the OS. Uploading a picture on iOS is incredibly cumbersome, but that's only because Apple chose to make it cumbersome (You can't natively share to facebook as you can with Twitter, you have to go into the facebook app and then upload it).You are far too obsessed with Windows phone to not know that the contest was any daily task that the challenger wanted to do and they could figure out a proper test for.
something interesting...
http://www.theverge.com/2012/1/10/2...erizon-and-at-t-dont-want-seven-stock-android
i know it's about Android, but i'm guessing the carriers have the same line of thinking with WP7 as well?
Competitions like this are inherently skewed though. It really only shows the rationale of the creator of the OS. Uploading a picture on iOS is incredibly cumbersome, but that's only because Apple chose to make it cumbersome (You can't natively share to facebook as you can with Twitter, you have to go into the facebook app and then upload it).
Android is the same way I believe. If the same task was upload to Google +, then naturally the social network the creator of Android is invested in, would handily smoke the competition (can't beat instant upload).
Campaigns like this always bring out the worst in fans.
No. It is just an abbreviation of the word application.Does anyone else despise the word 'App'?
Competitions like this are inherently skewed though. It really only shows the rationale of the creator of the OS. Uploading a picture on iOS is incredibly cumbersome, but that's only because Apple chose to make it cumbersome (You can't natively share to facebook as you can with Twitter, you have to go into the facebook app and then upload it).
Android is the same way I believe. If the same task was upload to Google +, then naturally the social network the creator of Android is invested in, would handily smoke the competition (can't beat instant upload).
Campaigns like this always bring out the worst in fans.
What exactly is Apollo going to add?
More APIs?
Wait, the 900 is already out?
I thought I read there were like 10 choices of challanges for people to do. Probably were not all photo uploading.
It's still skewed in that Microsoft is obviously going to pick ten challenges that WP7 compares favorably against the competition. For example one of the challenges was checking the weather, there's no way WP7 could've possibly lost that since it's right there on the live tile.
And that's fine, the whole point of this challenge was to demonstrate that their operating system can complete certain tasks faster. But it's not exactly a completely unbiased challenge.
Android has weather widgets.
It would be interesting to see some shoot-outs between phones in the $0.00-$49.99 range for each platform. The Lumia 710 and Radar 4G would probably destroy the competition.
brotkasten said:Microsoft sure loves that Android money.
http://www.neogaf.com/forum/showthread.php?t=458680
:lol this gon be good. no but seriously, what are you gonna do with 200 online signatures."Windows Phone on Sprint" online petition. lol
http://signon.org/sign/wp7-on-sprint...l&r_by=1955143
Android has weather widgets.