> You’re basically waiting for the death of Gingerbread, which won’t happen 
> for a while.

Even when my contract finishes and I own the phone T-mobile won't let
me unlock the bootloader or even provide the upgrades Sony has released.
T-mobile says gingerbread is secure (despite suggesting I could
illegally root it). The main reason I bought the phone was that Sony
promised timely upgrades and so I have considered citing "Not fit for
purpose". The only problem is I'm on a great deal and the only
result would likely be just losing the contract I'm on. There really
should be some sort of software provision responsibility law. Google's
being responsible and there is no way I would let my companies put
millions at greater risk, it's rediculous really. Who would have
thought the great principles of open source would be abused in such a
way.

-- 
_______________________________________________________________________

'Write programs that do one thing and do it well. Write programs to work
together. Write programs to handle text streams, because that is a
universal interface'

(Doug McIlroy)
_______________________________________________________________________

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