Linked by David Adams on Thu 30th Jul 2009 23:14 UTC
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I have my reservations on andriod as well. While based on a more open system, you can't actually install your own apps on it with out going through an app store like gatekeeper with the carrier's various whims enforced.
Incorrect, all you have to do is check a box (Settings -> Applications -> "Unknown Sources") and you can download random apps from web sites if you so desire. The main difference with the developer phones that I'm aware of is that they're unlocked (carrier-wise), and have some extra hardware onboard to aid in debugging.
Edit: I forgot, the developer phones will also run arbitrary nightly builds of Android. To my knowledge the stock G1, myTouch, etc. will only run builds signed by the carrier, assuming they haven't been jailbroken.
Edited 2009-07-30 20:45 UTC
I'm actually waiting for an andriod device with no restrictions and a real headphone jack, or the next nokia tablet. Which ever cost less that is introduced in the next couple of months.
HTC Hero have a standard headphone jack, not to mention a very slick userinterface, including multitouch. It also supports Adobe flash.




Member since:
2006-07-14
I have my reservations on andriod as well. While based on a more open system, you can't actually install your own apps on it with out going through an app store like gatekeeper with the carrier's various whims enforced. I think you can buy a developer version that doesn't have that restriction, but then you can't access the pseudo app store. Feel free to correct my misunderstandings as necessary.
I'm actually waiting for an andriod device with no restrictions and a real headphone jack, or the next nokia tablet. Which ever cost less that is introduced in the next couple of months.