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achillies wrote:@mitch, I have been watching some videos on the SGS2, Whoa!
Phone is sweet, performance for so
Now Im thinking to get this or wait for the next nexus device
The vids are made by @samjpullen on youtube
shaq090 wrote:any way to fix the force crash error on my samsung captivate when im on the android market?
jhonnieblue wrote:just flashed my rom l;ast night to ADR 5.1.7
running sweet, flashed the radio too
little hickups here and there with syncing but overall much more stable
going to check battery life on it now
loaded sense 3.0 weather on it, have to do the lockscreen tonight
jhonnieblue wrote:desire HD
radio img Radio_12.54.60.25_26.09.04.11_M2
just loaded the sense lockscreen 3.0, very sweet
but how do u get the 3d effects when shifting from screen to screen
was searching for it but couldnt find it
jhonnieblue wrote:wifi working sweet but d battery life dying quickkkkk
sigh
i did a battery stats swipe las nite so will do a recalibration today once it run down
dint dl launcher pro yet, ill try that sometime tonight
fallen18 wrote:sup guys new here, any1 knows if european roms work on our phones.
Android is top smartphone OS in the US, iOS is a close second
According to the latest report by the analysts from Nielsen, Android enjoys the highest usage among smartphone platforms in the United States, followed by iOS and BlackBerry OS.
Some 36 percent of US smartphone users have an Android smartphone. In comparison, 26% are using the Apple iOS while 23% are using RIM's BlackBerry OS.
The remaining 15% of the smartphone pie is taken by Windows Mobile, which still has a decent 9% user base, and by WebOS, Symbian, Windows Phone 7 and PalmOS. It's a little disappointing to see Symbian despite being the oldest platforms here and still very much alive unlike the now defunct Windows Mobile having no more than 2% market share. Same goes for HP's WebOS, which deserved a lot more success than it received.
Android's overall domination comes as no surprise really, considering the huge number of Android devices out there and new ones coming out almost every other week now. Apple's iOS, on the other hand, has so far been restricted to a handful of devices, ten to be precise, with four versions of the iPhone and iPod touch each and two versions of the iPad, launched over a period of four years. RIM too has a fair number of handsets under its belt and has been around much longer than the other two. We are sure if this chart showed smartphone users across the world, however, the difference between Android and iOS would be even higher as Android phones are available in lot more areas compared to iOS.
GSM Arena
AbstractPoetic wrote:Does anyone know if its commonplace for Android phones to have such short battery lives? I find myself having to charge my phone more than once a day. My BB has way better extended battery life than my Android.
I'm curious to know how the IPhone compares as I'm strongly considering switching.
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