Thanks.
I was able to get competent help at the TMobile store. They were
apologetic that they didn't have a prepaid data plan for the G1. The
nice man at the counter put his own sim card in the phone for long
enough to get past the first sign in. I since got it going with my own
SIM card and wifi
You need any SIM card with data access to pass initial screen (of
course if your phone is unlocked and accept any SIM) . After that SIM
card can be removed.
On 19 ноя, 08:54, Nathan wrote:
> Just to update everyone.
>
> In the absence of guidance on what will run 2.0, I decided against Dev
> 2 or
Just to update everyone.
In the absence of guidance on what will run 2.0, I decided against Dev
2 or the Droid. That means I'll probably end up getting something else
later, but hopefully when there is more clarification or more choices.
The multitouch, for one, is one that will be hard to test ou
Most rooted phones can see all the apps (because they report 'ro.secure=1')
ION, running the upstream build, can not see or download protected apps
(ro.secure=0)
On Sat, Nov 14, 2009 at 3:21 AM, Maps.Huge.Info (Maps API Guru) <
cor...@gmail.com> wrote:
> I have a Google ION and can purchase and d
I have a G1 dev phone and can't see any paid apps in the marketplace
with the device.
On Nov 14, 12:21 am, "Maps.Huge.Info (Maps API Guru)"
wrote:
> I have a Google ION and can purchase and download any app I want. I
> believe only rooted phones are restricted from downloading paid apps,
> is tha
I don't know if someone else mentioned this, but I want to stress that
99% of developers do NOT need a dev phone. If you just want to write
android apps in Java and run them, any phone will do this. Dev phones
are for if you want to do OS-level development. I'd much prefer a
phone that can downl
I have a Google ION and can purchase and download any app I want. I
believe only rooted phones are restricted from downloading paid apps,
is that correct?
-John Coryat
"Radar Now!"
"What Zip Code?"
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On Nov 13, 1:16 pm, "Maps.Huge.Info (Maps API Guru)"
wrote:
> You can quite easily setup an emulator that has the market app on it.
I'll have to give this a try. My point for Nathan is that if a dev
phone is indeed his only device and plans to use as his normal phone
he won't be able to buy or in
You can quite easily setup an emulator that has the market app on it.
I did this once Cyrket went off the air as it's a lot easier to view
the position of my apps on the emulator than the actual device. Search
Google for that topic to find out how to do it. Free, paid and copy
protected apps can be
Well, hopefully there will soon be a 2.0 image for the ADP1. Right now
there is almost no $$ to be made selling apps so I don't want to buy
any more hardware. That said the ADP1 (HTC dream phone) has been a a
really good device. It is well built, fast, has all the sensors and
has a keyboard. I am p
On Nov 12, 10:35 pm, Alberto wrote:
>
> One thing to keep in mind which may not be obvious unless you do some
> searching online. With a Dev Phone 1 for example, you can browse the
> marketplace download free apps but you CANNOT view or buy paid apps
> with a developer phone. If this is your only
> For me, this is one developer buying one phone. Not someone who can
> afford a fleet of them.
One thing to keep in mind which may not be obvious unless you do some
searching online. With a Dev Phone 1 for example, you can browse the
marketplace download free apps but you CANNOT view or buy paid
What they are going to sell as ADP2 is simply irrelevant as it lacks
keyboard. So far, ADP1 (or a rooted G1) all the time.
On Nov 13, 4:43 am, Nathan wrote:
> I'm sure this comes up once a while
>
> For me, this is one developer buying one phone. Not someone who can
> afford a fleet of them.
>
>
The only problem I see with the G1 is the doubts I've seen expressed
about whether it will get Android 2.0.
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> If I were in your shoes, Nathan, I think I'd try to hold off
> buying anything until 2.0 is released at large and it's clear which
> devices will and won't run it.
I see the wisdom in that. I can get by with emulators.
At this time, Dev2 is at the top of my list - if it runs 2.0
Buying an unl
I generally agree with Julius, I've been doing all my development on a
G1 (equivalent to the ADP1) and it's served me very well. IMHO, the G1/
ADP1 is the "reference hardware" for Android at the current time.
On Nov 13, 8:30 am, Julius Spencer wrote:
> I have found the G1 pretty good. I have wri
This does come up quite often. I ask myself "If I could have just one of our
phones, which would I choose?"
The answer is a tough one. If I wanted to develop apps that would run well
on all (or nearly all) Android devices, I would pick a Dream dev phone
because it's the first, and later phones are
It has the usual, compass, GPS, accelerometer, camera. Check out the
specs on the developer page. Also has a good support forum:
http://groups.google.com/group/io-device
No mention of the 1 year warranty that I saw, hopefully it still has
that.
-John Coryat
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That's good to know.
I'm not sure AT&T will work for me because the coverage is poor at my
home and office. I dropped it last year, and I'm on a prepaid TMobile
voice plan.
If the wifi, I may not need a data plan right away.
Does it have sensors?
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I can only give you my impressions from a user of the Dev phone 2
which has been previously released as the Google ION (at the Google IO
2009 conference).
It's a very nice device, I use it as my regular phone now, on ATT with
a $15 data plan and the usual voice plan. It works quite well, runs
1.6
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