Every company wants to make money. But this phone's GPS will NOT be locked. Neither was the Blackberry 8800's, nor the Ipaq 6515's, nor will the new Curve's, the Backjack 2's, etc.
Phones are locked to carrier. Hardware, as a rule, generally is not. Unless you're talking about Verizon's bluetooth, of course...
“The other one is a biggie, and it's something very noticeable in the videos: touch sensitivity is pretty bad. Using the virtual keyboard proved to be far too painful, and we're pretty sure it wasn't multitouch-friendly.”
Now that we've thrown 'em off the trail, use the form below to get in touch with the people at Engadget. Please fill in all of the required fields because they're required.
This is AT&T they always want a cut of the action or they won't let you use GPS otherwise.
Every company wants to make money. But this phone's GPS will NOT be locked. Neither was the Blackberry 8800's, nor the Ipaq 6515's, nor will the new Curve's, the Backjack 2's, etc.
Phones are locked to carrier. Hardware, as a rule, generally is not. Unless you're talking about Verizon's bluetooth, of course...