Hi Marc, I am very sorry to hear that but the APIs that were removed from the SDK 1.0 were removed simply because we didn't feel they were ready. Any public API in SDK 1.0 will have to be maintained forever and we're rather expose these APIs later but correctly, than sooner but incorrectly.
On Sun, Nov 16, 2008 at 1:27 PM, Marc <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > I've been working on a commercial distribution of all major "standard" > applications based on the previous Android release. > > I want to do things like filter incoming calls, sms's and only let > them through to the user if he's in an environment where he wants to > see them based on his own criteria (I'm in a meeting, and I don't like > private people to disturb me, but still want to see incoming calls > from work colleagues). > > Or I'm with "Suzanne" and if Suzanne checks my phone I don't want her > to see messages from "Melany, or recent calls to melany... A sort of > Private / Public switch that filters existing content, call logs, > already received and sent sms messages, and block incoming calls or > messages from contacts "not" part of this private profile, whereas > public information should be accessible. > > I've got this working with a new version of contacts, messaging, logs > etc. But all of these don't work on the new SDK 1.0.I was silly enough > to trust google that ALL applications are equal and that I could > actually "replace" any default application with my own (of course by > keeping interfaces, profiders similar in order to respect the > interactions with other "default" applications. > > this today is all not true anymore, and Android is NOT the open > platform as was once advertised. Not only can you not replace core > applications (which is still advertised on the android deveoper site - > shame on them) but the api has changed in a way that all the > "interesting" stuff, like the Telephony hooks etc are not anymore > available to third-party applications. > > I am very disappointed because I spent a lot of time developing stuff > that I can through away now. > > By the way, I have literally thrown my t-mobile g1 (which I imported > form the states) out of the window today (3rd floor), > > that's what happens if you put trust in the open-source community. > > At least with Microsoft or Apple, you know what you can and cannot do, > you take it or leave it, but you don't get screwed. > > All you people who read this, go somewhere else, and don't waste your > time and money on Android. It's dead before it ever came to life... > > Sad sad sad.... > > > > > -- Romain Guy www.curious-creature.org --~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~ You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Android Developers" group. To post to this group, send email to android-developers@googlegroups.com To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/android-developers?hl=en -~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---