anon(94115)
Banned
- Nov 29, 2010
- 5,697
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The ABA ( American Bleach Association ) does not condone bleaching or laundering money.
I don't care what kind of phone you use, that's not how I judge someone's worth or intelligence. Sent using tapatalk 2.
I have to agree while the wait sucks. I'd rather have a build that works perfectly. The battery life alone on this phone makes it worth the wait
Battery life is my main concern with it right now. I do have a couple others at the moment too but here is a screen shot for ya. This is with very light use. I normally would be just under 90 right now. Click to view quoted image
Sent using Droid Razr Maxx
So people are getting the ICS update for razr (maxx) - I got mine, and it definately needs work. Is it stable for the most part, well that's TBD.
They need to:
1. Remove a prompt in the phone dialer - which suggests to the user to type the name of a contact yet no text area exists to pop the keyboard - basically it's misleading you to believe that you can access contacts right from the phone dialer - the answer is tap the left most hard key at the bottom of the phone which will prompt you to search for contacts... They need to clean this up - more intuitive.
2. If you do an OTA and have an exchange account setup you may lose the ability to maintain your push option - and you may not have all the options that ICS truly brings to corporate email (which are more than GB). You will know there is a problem if you had an exchange account setup prior to the OTA update and afterwards the syncing for that account cannot be made active. Fix: remove the account and re-add it. You will then have syncing ability and more corporate email options...
3. The overall intuitiveness of ICS - just a few days working it, needs to be understood, if you have worked GB then ICS is a bit removed from it... Google changed everything around virtually. Of course, and this is a slap on Google / Android, they have to consider the user's when making a product - not the developer. I say this because I am a developer and it is not a good habit / practice to change everything up. People want continuity over bling (new features). They should plan to change just a couple features each release not the entire feature set.
Personally, and I do not know who's with me on this, but although I agree that android is way more advanced as a featureset than apple, the android OS is really in it's infancy moving into it's childhood - I'm saying it's not mature. I am looking at android as a giant science experiment - when all I want to do is operate a phone. That is where apple has it over android IMHO, simply because on iphone everything just works - there is something to be said for that...
I'd rather see google focus on maturing their core OS than adding neat features. I am almost ready to give up 4g and the maxx for an iphone, why?
1. I know if I turned on the iphone the next day it would simply work. The android experience is simply unpredictable.
I feel sorry for apple users though, as they are slowly exposed to tiny tid-bits of features -and they somewhat feel wowed each time they get a new phone, cause they were just handed a few more pixels, 300mhz higher in core, and a program they can converse with - siri, when we have had vlingo and a few other apps that did the same etc. Yet, their phones work - and they do not look the other way (anywhere else) for technology, they trust apple.
Sorry for the rant, but this phone thing is a game only, and the carriers are draining money out of our pockets faster than hones go through battery cycles.
at least google could improve the overall quality of their products...
one more thought...
one of the writers on this forum seem slanted towards conformity and a slave to the carrier's ways. He seems to slap users around a bit for being adventurous (rooters) or people who want to pimp their phone experience. I have a few words for him - not bad words, just some thoughts...
I have rooted my phone, to gain control over carrier marketing tactics and to protect myself against collateral data usage from unremovable applications...
1. I do not like the fact that carriers lock down apps that eat our data packages behind the scenes. And to most of us, unknowingly. Most of my friends only have 2gb data packages and cannot seem to make sense why from day to day they go through data when they only consume 50 - 100 k in email yet megs are missing (consumed) on a daily basis. But when Google Play constantly primes for updates and is defaulted to download those updates over our data plans - that is pure theft, not a buyer beware issue...
Note: yes there are controls and features which will help suppress data usage, but there are a family of applications which are frozen / locked and cannot be deleted (netflix, nfl football, etc) which are more often than not running in the backgroud jockying anonymous user information or checking for updates etc. They cannot be removed or truly prevented from running in the background. we have bee forced to babysit our phones for power and collateral data consumtion - yet cannot be uninstalled.
"Rooting takes care of that." So, if you want to tell users that they are busting their warranties or going against contracts etc thats cool, I can see the right thing to do in that set of statements - it's all good, yet where is the fight against the carriers who seem to beat us into a state of acceptableness with respect to using part of our data plans for their marketing purposes. I mean consider the following:
Comcast charges 46.00 a month for all-you-can-download (almost) data. by almost I mean they do have a 256gb limit for that price. Now, carriers typically charge now 15 for a single GB, but even at 20 for 2gb, do the math, effectively we are paying 128x the price vs cable... That is insane.
and our phone data is not even federally regulated for QA on measuring accurate quantity.
it would be a percentage of people who might tell me that I do not have to buy a phone plan, that is true, however it does not change the fact that carriers are commiting theft by deception and have contracts that really state we have no recourse...
that is all.
They need to:
1. Remove a prompt in the phone dialer - which suggests to the user to type the name of a contact yet no text area exists to pop the keyboard - basically it's misleading you to believe that you can access contacts right from the phone dialer - the answer is tap the left most hard key at the bottom of the phone which will prompt you to search for contacts... They need to clean this up - more intuitive.
Battery life for me took a hit immediately after the update, but has since returned to normal after 3-4 charge cycles. Not sure if it just readjusted on its own, or if anything I did helped. I tried doing a full charge while powered off, as well as clearing the system cache partition as follows:
1. Turn the phone off
2. Press and hold the power button and that vol up AND vol down keys all at the same time untill it loads into the screen where you can select "recovery"
3. Use the vol down key to highlight "recovery" then use the vol up key to select it
4. Wait for it to boot up (not pressing anything) untill you see an Android and a ! Inside of a triangle.
5. Once that screen appears, press the vol up and vol down key at the same time
6. It should load the recovery menu, press the vol down key to get down to "wipe cache" then use the power key to select it
7. When it is done, go to "reboot system now" and select it with the power key.
You could either try these things or just wait a few charge cycles to see if things settle in.
Then explain how all these people are getting the ICS update sent to their devices??
Thanks for the post--interesting points. It's true that the dialer seems a little clunkier at first, since they removed the Contacts selection. But just as with Blackberry, you can simply start inputting a phone number OR a name using the phone keypad, and the dialer will bring up the most likely match, along with other potential matches. I can't remember if this was a feature with Gingerbread, but overall, I think this meets my needs.
Soak testing?
Soak testing has already ended. Before you ask how I know this... Motorola has sent all of us soak testers an email stating that its over.
Sent from my DROID RAZR MAXX using Android Central Forums.
So people are getting the ICS update for razr (maxx) - I got mine, and it definately needs work. Is it stable for the most part, well that's TBD.
They need to:
1. Remove a prompt in the phone dialer - which suggests to the user to type the name of a contact yet no text area exists to pop the keyboard - basically it's misleading you to believe that you can access contacts right from the phone dialer - the answer is tap the left most hard key at the bottom of the phone which will prompt you to search for contacts... They need to clean this up - more intuitive.