VV(^^)VV_____OFFICIAL ANDROID OS/DEVICE THREAD_____VV(^^)VV

What Carrier are you currently using?

  • AT&T

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Verizon

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Sprint

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • T-Mobile

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Metro PCS

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Cricket

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • U.S. Cellular

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Straight Talk

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Other

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    0
  • Poll closed .
I've been using CM7 w/4G roms with Adfree that blocks ads in apps like pandora. However I had to uninstall Adree because it does not work well with a 4G connection, once i did that every time i load NT on my EVO it loads really slow and I have about 2-3mbps so it should really fast. I know NT runs ads on the top. Which I think is the main culprit for slow page loads. Anyone does the same thing like me and experience these problems? only NT loads slow every other website loads quick.
 
I've been using CM7 w/4G roms with Adfree that blocks ads in apps like pandora. However I had to uninstall Adree because it does not work well with a 4G connection, once i did that every time i load NT on my EVO it loads really slow and I have about 2-3mbps so it should really fast. I know NT runs ads on the top. Which I think is the main culprit for slow page loads. Anyone does the same thing like me and experience these problems? only NT loads slow every other website loads quick.
 
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Cellphones, Software, Tablet PCs, Mobile Software,
[h4]Google keeping Honeycomb source code on ice, says it's not ready for other devices[/h4]
By Sean Hollister posted Mar 24th 2011 5:56PM


Itching to put some sweet, crunchy AOSP Honeycomb on your hardware of choice? You might have quite a wait, as BusinessWeek reports that Google will not release the Android 3.0 source code in the near future, and we just received confirmation of the same. Google forwarded us the following statement, which pretty much says it all:
Android 3.0, Honeycomb, was designed from the ground up for devices with larger screen sizes and improves on Android favorites such as widgets, multi-tasking, browsing, notifications and customization. While we're excited to offer these new features to Android tablets, we have more work to do before we can deliver them to other device types including phones. Until then, we've decided not to release Honeycomb to open source. We're committed to providing Android as an open platform across many device types and will publish the source as soon as it's ready.

It's fairly clear that the company's motivation here is the same as it's been all along -- Google wants to restrict Android to the devices it was designed for. Though the company long insisted that earlier versions of Android were not for tablets, manufacturers quickly adapted the source code to slates anyhow, and we can imagine the company wasn't thrilled some of the middling results. At that time, Google's only weapon was to deny access to Gmail, Maps and Android Market, which it did liberally (with a few exceptions to the rule) but this time it sounds like it's simply withholding the "entirely for tablet" source code instead of sending cease-and-desist letters out. Another explanation, however, could just be that Honeycomb's not ready for primetime without some OEM help -- last we checked, smartphone support was a far cry from final, and even the finished Motorola Xoom still has a few software kinks to work out. Here's hoping a nice cold bowl of Ice Cream will smooth things over with the open source community before long.
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BusinessWeek
 
article_label_fileunder.gif
Cellphones, Software, Tablet PCs, Mobile Software,
[h4]Google keeping Honeycomb source code on ice, says it's not ready for other devices[/h4]
By Sean Hollister posted Mar 24th 2011 5:56PM


Itching to put some sweet, crunchy AOSP Honeycomb on your hardware of choice? You might have quite a wait, as BusinessWeek reports that Google will not release the Android 3.0 source code in the near future, and we just received confirmation of the same. Google forwarded us the following statement, which pretty much says it all:
Android 3.0, Honeycomb, was designed from the ground up for devices with larger screen sizes and improves on Android favorites such as widgets, multi-tasking, browsing, notifications and customization. While we're excited to offer these new features to Android tablets, we have more work to do before we can deliver them to other device types including phones. Until then, we've decided not to release Honeycomb to open source. We're committed to providing Android as an open platform across many device types and will publish the source as soon as it's ready.

It's fairly clear that the company's motivation here is the same as it's been all along -- Google wants to restrict Android to the devices it was designed for. Though the company long insisted that earlier versions of Android were not for tablets, manufacturers quickly adapted the source code to slates anyhow, and we can imagine the company wasn't thrilled some of the middling results. At that time, Google's only weapon was to deny access to Gmail, Maps and Android Market, which it did liberally (with a few exceptions to the rule) but this time it sounds like it's simply withholding the "entirely for tablet" source code instead of sending cease-and-desist letters out. Another explanation, however, could just be that Honeycomb's not ready for primetime without some OEM help -- last we checked, smartphone support was a far cry from final, and even the finished Motorola Xoom still has a few software kinks to work out. Here's hoping a nice cold bowl of Ice Cream will smooth things over with the open source community before long.
post_label_source.gif
BusinessWeek
 
I'm new to Android, just copped an Evo yesterday.  I've already Rooted, but what are the highest recommended ROM's?
 
I'm new to Android, just copped an Evo yesterday.  I've already Rooted, but what are the highest recommended ROM's?
 
Been waiting for sprint to release new phones, now that they are releasing the nexus s and evo 3d soon..which is the better phone??
 
Been waiting for sprint to release new phones, now that they are releasing the nexus s and evo 3d soon..which is the better phone??
 
Originally Posted by Artest93

Been waiting for sprint to release new phones, now that they are releasing the nexus s and evo 3d soon..which is the better phone??
I'd go with the Evo3D.
 
Originally Posted by Artest93

Been waiting for sprint to release new phones, now that they are releasing the nexus s and evo 3d soon..which is the better phone??
I'd go with the Evo3D.
 
Originally Posted by Alchemist IQ

I've been using CM7 w/4G roms with Adfree that blocks ads in apps like pandora. However I had to uninstall Adree because it does not work well with a 4G connection, once i did that every time i load NT on my EVO it loads really slow and I have about 2-3mbps so it should really fast. I know NT runs ads on the top. Which I think is the main culprit for slow page loads. Anyone does the same thing like me and experience these problems? only NT loads slow every other website loads quick.
no not at all.  ad free works fine for me. 

what pisses me off is the problems with youtube on cm7
 
Originally Posted by Alchemist IQ

I've been using CM7 w/4G roms with Adfree that blocks ads in apps like pandora. However I had to uninstall Adree because it does not work well with a 4G connection, once i did that every time i load NT on my EVO it loads really slow and I have about 2-3mbps so it should really fast. I know NT runs ads on the top. Which I think is the main culprit for slow page loads. Anyone does the same thing like me and experience these problems? only NT loads slow every other website loads quick.
no not at all.  ad free works fine for me. 

what pisses me off is the problems with youtube on cm7
 
Got the thunderbolt and I've wondering has anyone tried the easyroot for it. Has there been any issues?
 
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