That is of course your prerogative. :)

I don't think that means that the OS should be crippled with missing
functionality that every other WiFi implementation I've ever come
across has provided.

The most disappointing thing personally is that I bought my new HTC
Desire, knowing that it has WiFi, and now find I can't use it.  Even
more embarrassing is having to admit this to my iPhone colleagues.
And the final nail in the coffin is having to recommend against the
purchase of any Android devices for corporate use, simply because it
won't work on the corporate network. :(



On May 19, 9:59 pm, joshua hublar <[email protected]> wrote:
> I'd take great lengths to keep such devices off my network.
>
> On Wed, May 19, 2010 at 4:56 PM, Andy Burns
> <[email protected]>wrote:
>
>
>
> > Kiall Mac Innes wrote:
>
> >  Transparant proxying is trivial to setup and completely bypasses the
> >> need for clients to be aware of the proxy... maybe the feature request
> >> should be lodged with your network services team?
>
> > The average android/iphone user doesn't have much clout with the network
> > team in *most* corporate and educational networks.  They must either
> > authenticate to the proxy, or accept they don't get to the internet through
> > the corporate WiFi.
>

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