You're wrong. Fairness in the marketplace is required. It means that consumers must have a fair way of being able to comparison shop. How is a consumer supposed to know that the 32GB SD card they purchase may have 20GB of non-removable manufacturer third party presentations? If this is the case, the manufacturer is required to disclose this fact to the public so they can make an educated choice before purchase. With regard to 32GB actually formatting to only 29.7 GB, it says quite clearly (due to law and reasonable disclosure) that the card does have a capacity of 32GB but common formatting results in a different amount that virtually anyone can ascertain and assume by using these devices.
You are quite mistaken. If Verizon had said 8GB of user accessible on-board memory, it would be different. But they made no claim about that memory. All they advertised was that it had it. Verizon has made NO CLAIM whatsoever that the 8GB can be used for anything. All that they've advertised is that it has it.
No - it's a real problem. I have 23GB of music I transferred from my Incredible, which had 8GB in it. If I'm going to record high definition video, I'd like to have at least a full hour of recording time and do it to the internal drive, which is faster, with room to spare. If I had known that I had a fraction of the 8GB, I may have waited for the Bionic instead, as may have many other people.
Its not a problem at all. Just another ginned-up BS faux controversy by people that need a life or a hobby. You can't access the Bolt's internal memory for any reason. EVERYTHING is stored on the SD card.
Most of all, it's just not right to advertise a promise to deliver 8 loaves of bread in a grocery store order and, for the same money, deliver just 3. If that's fair, let me know your contact information. I have plenty of stuff to sell you and underdeliver.
Again, Verizon never said you could use it. The phone has 8GB of eMMC memory. That is a fact.