
11-29-2010, 12:05 AM
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| | CrackBerry Abuser Device(s): 8350i (Curve) & Droid 2 Carrier: Sprint/Nextel & Verizon | | Location: Stanfield, NC Join Date: Dec 2008 Posts: 184 Likes Received: 0
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SWFLFFPM,
Sorry for the confusion, Nextel will be a fond memory for ME in Feb 2011. My contract is dead in February and I'm not renewing it. I miss the Nextel very bad. But, unfortunately, Sprint could care less about us b@stard step-children. And, the slow as$ed iDEN network and a smartphone just don't jive together, either.
The i1 will be just like the 8350i. Probably a good phone with good potential, but tied to a rotting corpse of a network. I hate to say it, but no matter how good they make the hardware or the software in the handset, the network is not made for a smartphone. It is made for voice only communications. The bandwidth is too narrow to allow for the speeds needed for a good smartphone experience. There's nothing Sprint could do to fix that anyway, even if they would. Anything short of a hybrid with dual radios is simply not going to work for a Nextel smartphone.
Good luck to all you hold-outs. I wish you the very best. But, I believe once you try Android 2.2 on a real network, you'll be like me and wondering why the he11 you wasted all the time and money trying to get a Mercedes to run across a plowed field up the side of a mountain, with water in the gas tank.
The 8350i was a good phone. RIM dropped the ball with the OS problems, Sprint dropped the ball on the OS and the network problems, and I dropped the ball by wasting over two years trying to hope that it would work out. It's kinda like pushing a car uphill with a rope. Makes you feel retarded when people see you still trying to do it.
The last three OS updates caused more problems than they fixed. Since I upgraded to OS 5, I have to pull the battery at least once in every single DC conversation. I've tried downgrading and it still is the same problems. Messaging on a messaging phone should not require pulling the battery in order to use it for a messaging phone. No matter what flavor OS you happen to be running.
I'll admit, I was hooked from the moment I received my original handset back in December 2008. But the hook started to rust quickly as I waited for reboot after reboot after reboot, just to get text messages or carry on a DC conversation. It's amazing to me that the old brick phones worked so much better than this 8350i for everything except email. I never had a problem with email. But, phone calls, DC calls, text messaging was a nightmare from the onset and never got any better. He11, even the forum moderators got real phones. That should say a lot by itself.
OK, I'll shut up now. Like I said. For all you holdouts, I wish you nothing but the very best. I've been to the dark side and I like the landscape. I've yet to have to pull my battery to get any messages, SMS, MMS, Email, or anything else. I've had the original Droid and now I have the Droid 2. I like the HTC EVO even better than I do either of my Droid's. But, Android IS the future of smartphones. Hopefully, Sprint and Motorola can wring as much money as possible out of people who HAVE to use Nextel. Personally, I've switched all my guys at the police department over to the Droid 2. The Tikl PTT app is as good as Nextel ever hoped to be so we still have instant communications.
Good luck with your Nextel/Sprint/NowI'mWondering network and your 8350i. I've stopped carrying it as of Wednesday this past week. I figured it was better than taking a .45 to it.
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