This capability was in M5... guess someone changed their mind.
On Sep 9, 2:16 pm, "Justin (Google Employee)" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > but isn't that why you list an app's permissions before
> > installation (as shown in the marketplace screens)?
>
> To some extent yes, but there are some pe
> but isn't that why you list an app's permissions before
> installation (as shown in the marketplace screens)?
To some extent yes, but there are some permissions that are just not
available, for example rebooting the phone. Consuming SMSes is another
one of these. The question of where to draw t
I'm working on a Twitter app that works though SMS. Twitter has a
normal API, but I don't plan on getting an internet plan (and I doubt
I'm the only one), and I'd still like to receive them on my phone.
However, having to look at Tweets as normal text messages wouldn't be
as comfortable as in a de
As I said, you *can't* do this. Consider how dangerous this would be.
Users are generally charged per SMS or per SMS over a certain limit,
even "unlimited" plans usually have some limit where they charge you
more or terminate your service. What you want to do could end up cost
some users great amo
Hi Justin, How to direct an SMS to an application without passing
the SMS to other apps and the SMS inbox?
On Aug 20, 11:24 am, "Justin (Google Employee)" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
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You can't abort an SMS broadcast. This could allow applications to do
all sorts of things the user might not want.
Cheers,
Justin
Android Team @ Google
On Aug 20, 10:27 am, marcel-182 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I'm looking for a way to abort the broadcast of an incoming SMS or
> re
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