ajac i never attacked you, you actually attcked my little joke with some nonsesnse so please get your facts stright! I think I've said that to you enough no?
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why did you need to export contacts? why haven't you just been synergizin' with Google Contacts/Calendar this whole time? thus just plug and play when you get your EVO or X new phone. what have you been syncing with?
Maybe it will be OTA after the EVO is released, like 1.0.2 was the day the Pre was released.
Sorry for my ignorance with the lingo, but what exactly does "OTA" mean?
LOL ROFL LMBO thats funny.If it is coming out on May 19th then it only makes Sense (haha get it sense ik good one right) that the Evo gets it
Evo is coming out with android 13b Rotary power.
so jackson, any new info? im looking for distractions while doing homework lol
OMG LMAO, that just made my night. oh man my sides hurt. lollmfao^^^ "can survive a 6 inch drop" check
What patch did u use to transfer your address book from the pre to your gmail account?
Evo is coming out with android 13b Rotary power.
I would like to offer some reasoning and speculation as to why the Evo does not necessarily need Froyo, in order to support 4G.
The only factual information we know at this point, is what has been released in the SDK and documentation to developers. And all that information really is is a programmatic workaround for 2.1. Comments in the code snippet offered indicate that until Froyo is released, this is the workaround that will need to be used.
Now, it is being argued that Android 2.1 does not support WiMAX. In objected oriented development, you will usually see various "layers" developed independently... your app layer, business layer, data layer, etc. Each provide a different function and offer abstraction to other layers. For example, code that drives the UI doesn't necessarily care how database calls are made to get information to display. It simply makes a function call with a handful of parameters and gets back the dataset - the data layer takes care of the dirty work.
Along those lines, what is to prevent HTC/Android from implementing minor modifications to 2.1 to support the new WiMax radio? Given the SDK documentation, it is implied that the exist OS is fully capable of utilizing the hardware as long as the application in question is made aware of the new network type. The rest of it is hidden in other layers which HTC/Android would have modified for the purposes of the Evo working with 2.1.
While I too, would love to get Froyo with the Evo, I do not believe that the little solid information that has been publically revealed provides enough evidence to indicate as such. The SDK release is evidence that the 2.1 infrastructure can more than handle WiMax as simply another networkType.
Dylan check your inbox
Jackson, what about the rest of us?! I want something in my inbox too!
i dont have anything? email? nothing there eitherDylan check your inbox
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