A) I love Sprint.
B) The Evo is the best phone on Sprint.
C) Therefore I will stick with the Evo.
If you are having problems with your unit, keep exchanging it until you are happy. Period. I have had no problems with mine.
D) Remember one HUGE advantage with Sprint is in just one year we will get to upgrade all over again and can buy the Evo 2 (or whatever) I think I can “deal” with my Evo for one year. i

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Users on other carriers will have to wait two years, well without extra fees anyway.
While I am here I will say it here and now so listen up!
Benchmark tests are NOT conclusive on what the overall user experience will be.
Even some of the editors here put WAY too much stock in them.
I have a decent PC at home, When I run benchmarks I can see it is not 100% top of the line and the marks are not as good as other computers produce. I can see some rendered scenes run slower than others. At first impulse I think wow that sucks. Makes you feel a bit depressed and wanting more, that is human instinct.
Then I actually play a game that I play, a good graphically intense game like Battlefield Bad Company 2. It plays just fine! The game is intense and I have all my settings up full. If I went only by those benchmarks I would never have actually tried the game thinking it could never play it. Every game and experience will different in real life use. How often will you be playing a high intensive graphically heavy game anyway? If you are doing that a lot I would suggest you just get a damn PSP or something..,
So yes benchmarks are a great tool for measuring overall worst case rendering. Is a phone that plays back silky smooth in a benchmark faster than one that doesn’t, yes of course in the worse case, full out rendering tests, it sure is. The thing to remember though is very few games push the phone to these limits and for 95% of users they won’t need that!
Games can be optimized better and froyo will make a game with slight stutter now, run silky smooth anyway. So while it may not be top of the line it will be just fine for most things.
So my entire point is don’t take benchmarks as gold for what the phone can do, that is just being sucked into the numbers game. We need to see how it runs on the device itself.