Motorola co-Chief Executive Sanjay Jha has said today that demand for the Droid smartphone are still "extremely" strong, despite strong sales of rival HTC Droid Incredible, which also sells through carrier Verizon.
Jha also notes that Motorola is suffering from supply constraints, just as HTC has said they are for the Incredible and the EVO 4G, which sells via Sprint.
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video over 3g is nearly a decade old in the UK.... its nothing new, but ofc when apple "invents" something, its new. didnt know you there were no mobile phones before the iphone? and no copy/paste before last year, and no 3g networks or phones that used tham before 2008?
Did anyone watch that display that jobs did? I only watched pieces of it, but it seemed that he was having trouble making video calls because the WiFi was overloaded...does this mean that the iPhone 4G can only make video calls from WiFi? I guess that would make sense given AT&T's rule against any app that uses more than 64K bandwidth...and it wouldn't be the first time Apple released a new feature that they had no intention of enabling.
yeah you are right KB, only via wifi. though becuase aparently its has very open standards otehr programs will be able to use it, so we could have skype intergrating it.
Originally posted by shaffaaf: video over 3g is nearly a decade old in the UK.... its nothing new, but ofc when apple "invents" something, its new.
It's not that Apple "invented" it ... They just invented a form that people would want to use. That's all Apple's EVER done. They don't invent ANYTHING! They just take existing product lines and make a product you'll want to use.
Is the iPod the best MP3 player? Yes ... in terms of commercial success ... but many players had more features, better sound quality, and a lower price tag. The iPod just delivered the most useable experience.
When the iPhone first came out, it was laughably limited ... but simplicity/elegance of the design ensured it's success. At that time, my WM6 phone did way more than the iPhone, but I had to RTFM ever time I wanted to do anything remotely out of the ordinary.
Apple also was smart in their development of the much-maligned iTunes. Once people learned to use it for their iPod, it was relatively easy to transition to an iPhone, iPod Touch, and, now, iPad.
The iPad revolutionary? Not hardily. Netbooks have been around for ages. They just had a crappy user experience. The iPad, even though its functionality is very limited, has an experience people enjoy. The iPhone 4? Nothing amazing feature-wise ... and you're stuck with AT&T. But I imagine the user experience will be excellent.