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O preço referido no site da t mobile é de cento e poucos euros com plano de permanencia de 2 anos (tipo iphone na AT&T)

alguem sabe se se vais poder comprar sem o plano e se sim qual o preço?
 
Boas

O preço referido no site da t mobile é de cento e poucos euros com plano de permanencia de 2 anos (tipo iphone na AT&T)

alguem sabe se se vais poder comprar sem o plano e se sim qual o preço?

O objectivo do android é sair em varios telefones diferentes em varias operadoras e n existir apenas um único telefone, logo é capaz de n haver um preço certo.
 
O site da RTP linka para dois videos interessantes.

A integração com a net parece excelente (vindo do google não se esperaria outra coisa), praticamente vai deixar de ser preciso sincronizar os terminais móveis com os PCs lá de casa. Acho que qq dia vai mesmo deixar de ser preciso o computador lá de casa. :-D
 
em termos de utilidade eu neste momento considero um telemóvel muito mais útil ,móvel e prático. e visores tipo o iphone já são consideráveis e com uma resolução agradável a vista. tv, net, mail, voz ,sms.. se pensarmos nos primeiros lélés a diferença é abismal . 3.5g é a rede ideal para todos estes serviços.
 
Worst. Bug. Ever.

It turns out the bug in Android I wrote about yesterday was worse than we thought. When the phone booted it started up a command shell as root and sent every keystroke you ever typed on the keyboard from then on to that shell. Thus every word you typed, in addition to going to the foreground application would be silently and invisibly interpreted as a command and executed with superuser privileges. Wow!

http://blogs.zdnet.com/Burnette/?p=680

Pois é...
 
The Google Android dev team have announced the release of an 'early look' at the next version of the Android platform.

The new version 1.5 is based on the Cupcake branch of the open source operating system and promises lots of improvements over the current version.

Version 1.5 introduces APIs for features such as soft keyboards, home screen widgets, live folders, and speech recognition. Along with support for video recording, Bluetooth tweaks, and better integration with many of Google's online services. The user interface will also see improvements for a lot of the system's features.

According to the Android developer site, the final Android 1.5 SDK will be made available "around the end of this month" with no indication as to when consumers can expect to receive a similar 'over the air' update for their T-Mobile G1 or HTC Magic devices.

Fonte: android-developers.blogspot.com


Following on from Monday's early look at the Android 1.5 SDK, the Android Dev Team have now unveiled a number of new UI framework changes that are included in the new version 1.5 of the Android platform.

It appears that the Android designers have spent a fair bit of time refining and polishing up the appearance of the open source operating system.

As you can see from the before and after screenshots below (Android v1.1 images appear to the left), UI check boxes and buttons have been given a new look.

android-15-ui.jpg

android-15-ui-buttons.jpg

Currently the Android 1.5 version is not available for installation on handsets, but Android developers can download the 1.5 SDK from the Android developer site.

Fonte: Android-Developers.blogspot.com
 
Google CEO: 2009 Is the Year of Android

During Google's quarterly earnings call, CEO Eric Schmidt said that, "Overall, it looks like Android is going to have a very strong year." He went on to say that he expects there to be a "significant" number of Android-related product announcements from its varied device manufacturer partners. Schmidt didn't provide specifics, however. Right now, the HTC G1 is still the sole Android device that has been officially released to the market. HTC has announced a follow-up to the G1, the Magic, which will launch on Vodafone's network later this year. Numerous hardware vendors, including Samsung, have said they will offer Android-based handsets.

Fonte: phonescoop
 
HTC's Android Interface Makes Us Temporarily Forget All About Palm Pre

By matt buchanan, 9:40 AM on Tue May 19 2009, 32,419 views (Edit post, Set to draft, Slurp) Copy this whole post to another site
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2B4u7P4L6qE.jpg
Palm what? A better look at HTC's custom Android "Donut" build for Hero shows us just how buttery smooth and slick Android can be, and it's incredible.
The widgets have the tang of HTC—if you've used a Touch Diamond or Pro, they're familiar—but they seem to have a grace they don't on Windows Mobile. (Yeah, it's an emulator, but I'd bet—hope—that a lot of the speed translates to the handset as well, since Android is designed for this kind of customization by handset makers and carriers.)
HTC seems like the first to scratch the surface of what you can do with a custom Android build—which, I love the fact that every Android build is now named after fattening pastries—so maybe Android's time really is coming. [Phone Dog via Android Guys]


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2B4u7P4L6qE&feature=player_embedded


in http://gizmodo.com/5260862/htcs-android-interface-makes-us-temporarily-forget-all-about-palm-pre
 
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