Muthu:

trust but verify is actually an old Russian adage that Reagan picked
from Gorby, and Russian culture apparently picked it from some obscure
Latin source...

YA

On Jul 4, 4:35 am, "Muthu Ramadoss" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Its frustrating for all the early developers and the small companies who got
> on board early. They feel they have been suddenly dropped deep in the ocean,
> with a promise that a lifeboat is coming to help soon.
>
> All those who are caught in that situation can only hope and pray now.
>
> Someone said (Reagan?)
>
> Trust but Verify.
>
> We trust Google with Android. Hope they can live up to this.
>
>
>
> On Fri, Jul 4, 2008 at 5:23 AM, Mark Murphy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > Anil wrote:
> > > But the truth is, Android is effectively dead.
>
> > Your attitude is reminiscent of slimy Wall Street analysts who nail
> > businesses to the wall for "missing" a quarter's "projections". Any
> > business or open source endeavor worth pursuing, like Android, is a
> > marathon, not a sprint. Saying Android is "dead" before devices are even
> > available is so premature it's sad.
>
> > Look at it this way: At this time in the iPhone's development, few
> > people outside One Infinite Loop even knew of its existence, since they
> > didn't announce the project until the device was ready for sale.
> > Compared to Apple, OHA has been a case study in transparency.
>
> > And Apple has seemed to do OK, at least on hardware sales, despite their
> > clammed-up nature. Hence, keeping one's mouth shut does not seem to
> > preclude success in the mobile marketplace. Therefore, the fact that OHA
> > is "running silent" right now is not necessarily a death knell.
>
> > Does it suck, from our standpoint? Sure. We were wowed by the early
> > transparency and open-source-ness and have therefore raised our
> > expectations. But by the standards of the mobile world, our expectations
> > are downright loony. The fact that our expectations are even conceivable
> > is a testament to the transparency we do have, not a tombstone atop the
> > transparency we don't.
>
> > Now, compared to other open source projects, even corporate-backed ones,
> > the level of transparency since the early days has been dreadful. But
> > Eclipse, OpenOffice.org, and even Mozilla had rocky beginnings, with
> > large quantities of code tossed over the wall with little structured
> > support. They eventually turned the corner and have become solid open
> > source citizens, if not better.
>
> > In other words: patience, grasshopper.
>
> > --
> > Mark Murphy (a Commons Guy)
> >http://commonsware.com
> > _The Busy Coder's Guide to Android Development_ -- Available Now!
>
> --
> take care,
> Muthu Ramadoss.
>
> http://cookingcapsules.com- nourish your droid.http://mobeegal.in- find stuff 
> closer.
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