Thanks, Jerry for your advice and insight.

I just wanted add a bit of info to your advice.

In the case that an Android device user needs to use MS Office
features on an Android device.  For the time being, the Android user
can use online Google Docs for your 'Word Processing', 'Spreadsheet',
and 'Presentations' tasks/projects.

Hope this helps.

Thanks.

- Nikhil


On Sep 27, 3:30 am, "Jerry Elizondo" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hello:
>
> Today Android (nad the G1) are just a toy, same as Einstein was the day he
> was born. If you need the phone TODAY to do your business the best you can
> do is wait six-twelve months, then it will be a killer phone.
>
> Today for example, it lacks Outlook (Exchange Server) compatibility, so if
> your email is important, you´re out of luck unless you use gmail. Microsoft
> Office is out as well. However I know that people are working on the
> Exchange server and the OpenOffice suite (a suite comparable and compatible
> with Microsoft's Office), so in a few months it will be worth your money.
>
> My best advice, don't lock yourself into a long term contract; hang on for
> six months and drops a message then, you'll be amazed at all the things that
> have changed.
>
> I have it on good sources that just in China there are 1,200 developers
> working on applications for the Android platform plus thousands more in
> Europe, the USA and Latin America. The results will be a revolution for the
> cellular phone industry.
>
> I'm NOT affiliated with google or any phone company, I'm an independent
> software developer (with 20+ years of experience) and I believe, deeply,
> that this phone will be the talk of the town in a few months.
>
> Cheers,
>
> Jerry
>
> On Fri, Sep 26, 2008 at 7:59 PM, <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > I am a t-mobile Wing user, and I am very fond of it. T-mobile will
> > launch (finally) it's 3G network in a month, and it turns out my Wing
> > is not compatible. The new Android is open source, and I am not sure
> > exactly whether that is good or bad for me.
>
> > The videos, you tube, and music are ok, but I like the business
> > functions:
> > Mobile office (word, power point, excel)
> > Outlook syncing
> > Reading and starting new documents on my phone.
>
> > Is anyone familiar enough with what Android can do? The t-mobile
> > people tech support have no clue, they read off the website same as
> > me.
>
> > Before I invest money in a new gadget, i want to make sure it is not
> > just a toy.
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