lolz my uncle designed this phone.
its sexy as fuck.
its sexy as fuck.
Verizon is $30SealXo wrote:
how much would the monthly plan for this be if i wanted unlimited text/internet? im down to use my upgrade and pay 150 for it but i dont want to pay 100/m for email...
wat?edlT wrote:
lolz my uncle designed this phone.
its sexy as fuck.
Then any Android phone will not disappoint you. Get yourself one.Uzique wrote:
to clarify an earlier point: im NOT interested in a phone for music/video/camera stuff, at all. i have an mp3 player/camera that does a better job. any phone that markets itself as an 'mp3' or 'music on the move'-type device instantly gets ignored by me... i see no reason in paying £££ extra for a phone with mp3-playback as a central feature, when they offer paltry storage limits. i find my max-sized ipod too restrictive, so there's no way i'll be swayed between apple/droid according to multimedia features. i want a solid phone- apps, internet browsing and cool shit are great pluses. i want to make the leap to smartphones/touchpad phones in general, that's all.
But the iPhone doesn't use a Snapdragon chip.....Kmarion wrote:
[*] Droid runs the same SnapdragonTI OMAP chip as the iPhone.
true - it uses an ARM processorBertster7 wrote:
But the iPhone doesn't use a Snapdragon chip.....Kmarion wrote:
[*] Droid runs the same SnapdragonTI OMAP chip as the iPhone.
Just to be pedantic, the CPU in the Snapdragon chipset is an ARM processor.CapnNismo wrote:
true - it uses an ARM processorBertster7 wrote:
But the iPhone doesn't use a Snapdragon chip.....Kmarion wrote:
[*] Droid runs the same SnapdragonTI OMAP chip as the iPhone.
http://www.google.at/search?source=ig&a … =f&oq=
I assume this. I think that info came from Droiddog.commikkel wrote:
Just to be pedantic, the CPU in the Snapdragon chipset is an ARM processor.CapnNismo wrote:
true - it uses an ARM processorBertster7 wrote:
But the iPhone doesn't use a Snapdragon chip.....
http://www.google.at/search?source=ig&a … =f&oq=
It is. But the iPhone doesn't use the Snapdragon - that was all I was saying...mikkel wrote:
Just to be pedantic, the CPU in the Snapdragon chipset is an ARM processor.CapnNismo wrote:
true - it uses an ARM processorBertster7 wrote:
But the iPhone doesn't use a Snapdragon chip.....
http://www.google.at/search?source=ig&a … =f&oq=
But yea, they should not have said the same.The Motorola Droid has a radically different exterior compared with the iPhone but uses a speedy Cortex-A8 ARM chip like the Apple phone.
The Motorola Droid has a radically different exterior compared with the iPhone but uses a speedy Cortex-A8 ARM chip like the Apple phone.
(Credit: CNET Reviews)
"The Droid makes a big leap in internal performance. Compared with its rather sluggish Android predecessors," CNET Reviews said, citing the speed at which the Droid opens applications and menus and scrolls through lists and switches display screens.
"We're really pumped to see all the industry excitement it's created," said Jeff Dougan, the OMAP 3 product marketing manager at Texas Instruments, which supplies the OMAP 3430 processor that powers the Droid. "This is the first handset that truly realizes the full potential of Android," he said, referring to Google's Android 2.0 operating system that runs on the Droid phone.
The TI processor, like the one in the iPhone, is based on an a new architecture called Cortex-A8 from U.K.-based chip design house ARM, whose wide variety of chips populate most of the world's cell phones. Dougan says most smartphones currently on the market use an older, lower-performance ARM architecture than the Cortex-A8--with the exception of the Palm Pre, which opted for the newer TI chip. The Cortex-A8 provides a "two to three times performance boost" over older architectures, according to Dougan.
....So, internally the Droid is every bit the iPhone's equal. And future versions of TI OMAP 3 chips that may appear in upcoming Droids will be backed by formidable ecosystems, according to Baron. "Investments in application software may lean more toward the TI components," said Baron, given TI's strong support of the entire chip ecosystem, including auxiliary chips and software development tools.
Note:: Apple's and Samsung's reluctance to release information about the processor used in the iPhone 3GS has made it difficult to determine if the chip is based on the Samsung S5PC100, according to the Microprocessor Report's Baron. Many iPhone 3GS reviews and teardowns, however, state explicitly that the iPhone's processor is essentially the Samsung S5PC100 processor.
This is true.. but really there is no comparison with the palm pre and droid/iphone.CapnNismo wrote:
\The Palm Pre was supposed to be the smartphone that changed the game and it just kind of fizzled. I'm not listening to the hype.
Last edited by Kimmmmmmmmmmmm (2009-11-20 09:23:15)
yep, it isKimmmmmmmmmmmm wrote:
is the droid phone 3G?
Last edited by NooBesT (2009-11-20 09:57:13)
I've got the HTC Magic and it's plenty quick for me. If you want to do like full on 3D games on it, you'll want the Motorola or the iPhone, but if you want a great smart phone and want to use it as a tool, it's fabulous. Then if you actively use Gmail and Google's other services, the Android OS meshes right into that fabulously.Jenspm wrote:
So this thing isn't coming to Norway before Christmas, and the SE X10 isn't either.
Oh well, I guess it'll be an iPhone then... Unless anyone knows of any other cool Android phones? The HTC ones look slow and terrible tbh, but I haven't tried them.
The HTC Hero offers late generation software on early generation hardware. 528MHz CPU and 288 MiB of RAM doesn't sound very appealing when stacked against other phones.Jenspm wrote:
It seems that the Samsung Galaxy and the HTC Hero are the two main phones on the Android maret in Europe outside of Germany atm... How would you rate these two against eachother?
That's the same as EVERY Android phone on the market with the exception of the Droid. My HTC Magic is quite snappy. If I have a lot of stuff running in the background, it slows down. But then I turn my favorite app (TasKiller) on and shut stuff down.mikkel wrote:
The HTC Hero offers late generation software on early generation hardware. 528MHz CPU and 288 MiB of RAM doesn't sound very appealing when stacked against other phones.Jenspm wrote:
It seems that the Samsung Galaxy and the HTC Hero are the two main phones on the Android maret in Europe outside of Germany atm... How would you rate these two against eachother?
This is what I really like about it.CapnNismo wrote:
Android is COMPLETELY customizable, open source and most everything that's good is free.