Linked by Thom Holwerda on Wed 9th Dec 2009 22:06 UTC
Thread beginning with comment 398751
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Well, now people get to play. It's hardly surprising that Verizon would have features disabled. Given that the platform as a whole is so open, of course they can only keep it locked down to a small degree.
The question is, do you lose anything by making your phone hackable (the good kind of hackable)? If not, then let's just see what users do, and hope Verizon does not go shooting themselves in the foot.
The question is, do you lose anything by making your phone hackable (the good kind of hackable)? If not, then let's just see what users do, and hope Verizon does not go shooting themselves in the foot.
Rooting your Droid won't get around some of the things that Verizon has disabled. I think Exchange support for one will still be blocked because they're doing it at the network level based on protocol or something.
Stupid Verizon. Pay us $45 a month for unlimited (limited to 5GB) access to the internet (well, most of the internet, exchange servers cost you more to connect to).




Member since:
2006-01-02
Well, now people get to play. It's hardly surprising that Verizon would have features disabled. Given that the platform as a whole is so open, of course they can only keep it locked down to a small degree.
The question is, do you lose anything by making your phone hackable (the good kind of hackable)? If not, then let's just see what users do, and hope Verizon does not go shooting themselves in the foot.