My emergency response was to deselect Verizon in the Android Market
publishing page. Warning: Lots of checking everything else is needed
for that, but done in less than 5mins.
That should buy some time but of course that initial sales push might
be over by the time an app is turned around on 2.0.
If history is any indication (launch of the G1), this initial sales
push isn't much of a dominating factor over time. But that's just me
saying, of course.

On Oct 27, 11:38 am, "Maps.Huge.Info (Maps API Guru)"
<[email protected]> wrote:
 I'm  guessing there must be some sort of non-disclosure involved with
 this Droid thing and Android 2.0, or else we would have something to
 work with. It's a bit frightening to think that there could be
 100,000+ devices sold on day one and I've never seen the SDK, don't
 know if my app will break or have any idea what workload I'll be
stuck
 with when the release reaches my desk.

 The real stinker here is that the popularity index in the market
seems
 to be tied to the retention percentage (the number of people that
 download the app and keep it). If my apps malfunction on this droid
 thing and 2000 people download it, find it defective and uninstall,
 the app will plummet in the rankings (Radar Now is currently 60%, #28
 in News and Weather and #478 overall).

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