1. Well that's nice, go back to around February or earlier and read my comments--I believed I defended the "cracked screen" issue until I found multiple accounts from different users and an article--one which Phandroid also posted.1. INM not so HO, I do not find your interests in N1 sincere. One could say, and from the reactions to your posts and history that you have an agenga. I always do research before I commit on a purchase. What "I" don't do is to come on forums making posts nick picking, pointing out any flaw I can find and call it "because I'm doing research so that I may purchase it."
2. Which IMO should be a limiting factor in some of your comments regarding the N1. How you word your posts reflects as though it's coming from an actual user. Owning or at least using an N1 for a while would give you more credibility to the type of comments you post and would garner less negative reactions.
3. This issue does not affect the market at all. Unlike you, some of us like to have more robust, quality applications than games. The form factor severely limits it's use as a "game machine" anyway. Get a PSP or DS for that. I don't wan't Android to be know as a gaming OS. That would surely kill Android just like what happened to the Amiga (AmigaOS), Commodore's gaffs non withstanding.
2. I'm sorry, but whether it's coming from me, or someone who actually solved "2 + 2" it'll equal "4" no matter how you spin it.
3. A more robust quality application that can't be developed with a superior touch screen sensor? Are we living in some reverse world where having better, working, functioning hardware is somehow a negative thing? You can't have even most robust quality applications with the maXTouch sensor over the Clearpad2000? Where is the logic in that? Please do tell.
No, actually you fail in reading comprehension. I've USED the Droid and Droid Eris (I have 4 Droids on my plan and have access to two of them every day). Knowledge about a consumer-friendly OS and Linux is black and white; if you don't know that then you've already shown that you know nothing in terms of understanding the two OSes."I would think I know a bit about the OS"
Sorry I had to quote it again.
That would be like me saying, I know a bit about Linux or say Subaru engines and then go on their forums to give out advice and knowledge just because I "read" about them!
Sorry, that was a smack+down+global=FAIL on you part, sir.
So you're bias, who would have guessed. But you're right, if you've already sunk money into the N1, it's not worth it to make the switch. I hope the CDMA version of the N1 gets the maXTouch sensor--which would make sense because it's been delayed and we haven't heard much from it.To stay on topic. I would stay with the N1 because the Incredible is just an incremental improvement. Having a better touch sensor screen and 8mp camera is not enough to make me switch. I'm waiting for the next generation Android (hopefully Google) phones that will have the 1.5Ghz QSD8672 chipset later in the year.
If I never had an N1, I would get an Incredible only if it was GSM.
I'll never get ANY phone using CDMA.
I'll never use Verizon as a carrier. I never like them since their Bell Atlantic days.
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