How many people own a Xoom..??? I've never met anyone with one this sux...!!!!!
Ultimately, that is all that really matters. So long as you are happy with your device, nothing else really matters.Honestly who cares? I know i have a Xoom and in my opinion its the best tablet on the market.
That's great. Unfortunately, I do not think any of us who have the type of money we have spent on this thing should be forced into rooting the device in order to make it what it should have been out of the box.ICS has made this a great device. I have even sold my laptop and replaced it with my Xoom. And i love that the Xoom is a GED. I love knowing i have ICS and just got 4.0.4 while Galaxy tab owners still have honeycomb.
Why don't you climb off of your high horse. Critiquing and commenting on Motorola and VZW's inability to efficiently and quickly update their devices is not whining. Why don't you stick to your comments about the devices, the manufacturers, and carriers. Let's not make this personal as you clearly desire too.I can't count the people I know in my company who own one. Many of us do. Outside of that population, I'll bump into the occasional XOOM owner, but it's not common a common occurrence.
As others have said, adoption of Android tablets has been hobbled. The blame for this is shared by many... from Google releasing Honeycomb prematurely to Motorola bungling the release of the XOOM and not communicating (ABOUT ANYTHING!!!), to NVIDIA trying to cash on on the buzz with news releases talking about quad-core devices in next generation tablets before the dual cored tablets were even on shelves!
And lets not forget the general craziness of all the Android tablet makers clamoring on about their products, most of whom wouldn't have product for months, confusing the living s--t out of consumers.
Now, with that first year behind us and ICS on our tablets, I'm hoping sanity will finally arrive to the Android tablet market. But consumers are a wary crowd. It's going to take time and experience before they believe the hype of what Android can offer them. "Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me."... and all that.
Speaking of sanity...
From all the belly-aching I'm reading about Motorola/Verizon not supplying ICS to the 4G XOOM on this and other threads, I assume many people on these threads have led incredibly sheltered lives.
Stop your belly aching already! It sounds like a bunch of women who can't get dates for the prom! Just deal with it. Belly aching is not going to make Motorola or Verizon release ICS to you sooner (if at all). Either succumb to the fact that ICS is many moons away or root and have ICS today. It's that friggin' simple.
The instructions are so simple. Maybe someone could re-write them in poop so people can smell their way through it too. Maybe that would help? ;-)
Whether Motorola/Verizon is "wrong" is irrelevant. What Motorola/Verizon "should have done" or "should do" is irrelevant. It is what it is people. Deal with it. Stop crying about it incessantly. Come out from behind Mommy's apron and deal with it.
If you bought a house and there was something wrong with it, you'd fix it. You wouldn't cry to every neighbor, every day of every week saying how wronged you were. You'd just man up and fix it.
Yeah. Motorola sucks. Verizon sucks. No argument from me! I own three of these things. But mine all work GREAT!!! ...because I recognized the situation and fixed the situation.
Just puh-leeze... stop the sniveling!
Why don't you climb off of your high horse. Critiquing and commenting on Motorola and VZW's inability to efficiently and quickly update their devices is not whining. Why don't you stick to your comments about the devices, the manufacturers, and carriers. Let's not make this personal as you clearly desire too.
The Wall Street Journal is reporting that Google will revive its direct-to-consumer sales strategy it used with the Nexus One smartphone to sell tablets later this year. Google will reportedly sell the tablets through an online store, instead of going through traditional retailers.
The Wall Street Journal's sources say that the tablets won't actually be made by Google itself, but rather its partners like Samsung and ASUS will build them. They say that some of the tablets could be branded as Google's, however. The sources did not reveal when Google plans to launch the direct-to-consumer store, but they did say that the company is expected to launch Jelly Bean, the next version of its Android mobile operating system, in the middle of this year.
By all accounts, Google's previous venture into direct-to-consumer sales failed, with it shutting down online sales of the Nexus One smartphone only a few months after it started offering the device. Many point to the complexities with carriers and the high cost of an unlocked phone as the reasons for the failure of Google's retail plan with the Nexus One. Others posit that Google had trouble with technical support for the handset once it was sold to customers.
Tablets are a different beast than smartphones though, and Apple has proven time and again that customers are willing to spend upwards of $500 for a tablet device. The current Android tablets on the market have yet to really pose a challenge to Apple's dominance with the iPad, so maybe a fresh take on how Google presents them could be a good thing.
Jen-Hsun Huang, Nvidia’s chief executive, recently told the New York Times that the quad-core Tegra 3 SoC incorporates enough cheap commodity components that Android tablets will cost as little as $199 by this summer -- once the cost savings take hold, that is. He said around $150 in build materials have been removed, including expensive memory.
When I read the same things from the same people for the umpteenth time... well... whatever... I'm just done with it. How about something upbeat?
Just came across this article. Apparently Google is sick of the situation too. Couple this with the recent news from NVIDIA and this gets exciting.
Hopefully Google will be able to come up with something innovative for their tablet. If it is yet another tablet designed to beat Apple's iPad, they are going to lose. The device will need to be ready to go as well on the day its released at least in my opinion. The Xoom is the perfect example of what not to do when releasing a device like this.
At least at this point, iPad has mastered the market. I paid less for my new iPad this year without a contract since they weren't doing contracts, than I did last year on my Xoom with a contract.
In the immortal words of Ronald Reagan, "There you go again."
The one beef you have is your XOOM lacks ICS. It's a good beef to have! ICS on the XOOM is, well, awesome.
But now you seem to be assuming anything new from Google will not at least have ICS or higher. Really? With Jelly Bean due this Summer? The fact is... starting with ICS, Android tablets have finally come of age. They are ready for the huddled masses.
If you really want to "critique", tell us what about our lives and habits an iPad services better than a XOOM. Please don't say something like "timely updates" or "it just works" or some other catch phrase that lacks any meat. Details... we're looking for details.
And BTW, Apple is no saint when it comes to updates. Ask my brother-in-law. He had Siri beta on his iPhone4. When they came out with iOS5, they took it from him and made believe it can't run on anything less than an iPhone4S. :-\
You know something, you aren't worth the bother. You simply can't make a single response to me without turning things personal. My statements have absolutely nothing to do with whether or not the tablet that Google puts out has ICS, or any other operating system.
It's a shame this forum chooses not to offer the ability to ignore people.
You know something, you aren't worth the bother. You simply can't make a single response to me without turning things personal. My statements have absolutely nothing to do with whether or not the tablet that Google puts out has ICS, or any other operating system.
It's a shame this forum chooses not to offer the ability to ignore people.