Oh, I also turned off my cell and data service but not my Bluetooth. I handled about 20 messages in my BB email accounts that were managed once we were on the ground.
Seems like a "native" thing to me.
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Oh, I also turned off my cell and data service but not my Bluetooth. I handled about 20 messages in my BB email accounts that were managed once we were on the ground.
Seems like a "native" thing to me.
That is the problem with apple users....they are all iFocused ;)
;) No one is safe in the digital world u know?
:o Glad u enjoyed my version of this thread :D LOL
so mr email/ multitask on airplane mode... riddle me this... when on a wifi enabled flight i sign up on my blackberry.. bridge my blackberry and bbm with everyone on the ground and then on top of that let them know when i land and make sure my ride is in place and i surf the web the entire web and i watch movies and switch to the internet and surf and switch back when a good part of the movie happens cause yea how well does the ipad multitask when u switch from the video player.. dont worry ill wait... oh didnt think so and how many people cant u talk to on your flight... oh and how much do u pay to surf the internet without wifi hmmmm once again ill wait... and how about u tell me again how do u upload entire photo albums on facebook or download zip files or anything from the internet while on this wifi enabled ipad without itunes... please dear sir please tell me .... oh and tell me why u arent on crackiphone.com instead... clearly ur on the wrong site
Easy answers...
He didn't exchange it because he didn't think it was faulty, he just thought it sucked. He'd already returned it by the time he met with me again to relate the story, at which time I pointed out how well mine was working in the same office, and told him that numerous others had reported WiFi problems with specific units which they had to return.
As for the "Bridge on a Plane" thing, I pointed out the same thing, asking "Why couldn't you just turn off the radios and use the phone still?". His answer -- and remember, he's the traveller, not I -- was "Some airlines insist on you shutting the phone right off." I said that's nuts, if they still would let you use a tablet, and he agreed, but said that's just the way they are. I asked but don't recall which airline it was.
actually lets clarify somethings first off u dont have to cut your phone off just the data... and u can bridge to ur playboom so email is there... and the wifi thing.. my ipad and my iphone both had the same problems in your case urs worked better... and my last point besides the downloading 8pages of apps on mmy iphone and only using 3- 4 apps.. what special revolutionary thing can you mobile apple product do that puts it light years ahead of the playbook
If you read carefully, you'll see that the person in question (it wasn't me) stated clearly that the airline insisted that people actually turn OFF their phones (for the entire flight, too). I realize and you realize that's not necessary, but I'm only the messenger, and the other guy was only the victim. Please don't suggest he should have ignored that directive from the airline...
Secondly, I have no idea what you're talking about with respect to Apple this and iPhone that. I have a PlayBook and love it, and (again, if you could read it) you'd see that I had actually been the reason the other guy tried the PlayBook in the first place, and am the reason he's willing to try it again as soon as native email is available. I'm one of the PlayBook's biggest supporters... I'm just not blind to some of its flaws.
You sound like someone looking for a troll where there isn't one...
The elephant in the room�
Huh? Wi-Fi.
Sure if you have wifi and want to pay $5-10 then you can use native email.
The real question is why is everyone so obsessed with native email. BB bridge works great and PlayBook 2.0 is coming soon. We all know that PlayBook does not have it. My original post was meant to highlight the strengths of the PlayBook, not the weaknesses. IMHO the PlayBook has only been getting better and even though it is a work in progress, I will continue to enjoy using it until then!
You can use your cell or laptop until the boarding door closes on any airline � then all electronic devices need to be turned off. Once you are above 10,000 feet you can turn approved devices back on (no cell phones, only smart-phones with the cellular radio off). If the plane is equipped with wi-fi (I am a Diamond on Delta which has about 75% of the big planes equipped with wi-fi, while none of the CRJs have it � yet), you can send and receive email, BBMs and have internet access (you cannot text message which uses cellular radio). As such, you could bridge your playbook after 10,000 for the remainder of the flight until they are on final approach, cleared to land.
BBMs do not push if you send them while in the air, not connected to wi-fi. When you land, they show up as a permanent red �X�, not sent. Emails push automatically, and text messages will send if you open and hit �resend� when on the ground.
I think that most of the people that are concerned about the PlayBook having native email are BES users that can't get their emails on their phone. Also the people that don't use BBs but maybe use iPhones or Android devices. They don't have the Bridge functionality. But to you and me, native email is pretty much pointless (except in very rare situations) since we do have BB phones :D
*THIS* I've been wanting to buy a Playbook for several months now but I need/want a native email app. I do not currently have a BB phone (but that wouldn't make a difference to me) and I hate using webmail.
I can accept limitations in a tablet but lack of native email is not one of them. Even if I'm not near a wifi connection at the time, I can still go through old emails, delete some, reply to others, etc... and when I finally get near a wifi connection, all my prior email activity syncs up to the server.
best part is when im on my PB if one hand gets tired i can go to the next one! hmm... ill leave it at that HAHAHA! The Ipad is just to big and heavy both gens (as much i like them its a reality check)
There's a lot of playbook owners suffering from something alot like little man syndrome. Does that PlayBook come with the huge chip you carry on your shoulder? I bought a playbook, admittedly without knowing I needed a BB phone to get the most utility out of it, thought it was junk and returned it. I've never had an iPad and I think all tablets are probably overpriced toys, but playbook owners seem to feel the need to defend their purchase in the face of competing technology. Why is that, I wonder.
I don't think playbook owners inherently feel the need to defend their purchase. But let's face it. When we love something, we tend to be protective. When someone belittle your beloved Ipad, some Ipad owners would probably come out to defence. On the same note, when someone belittle your beloved playbook, some playbook owners will speak out. What's the problem?
Sent from my BlackBerry 9900 using Tapatalk
Well, let's just say that most people tend to justify that they did the right thing.
Same as some people who sold their PlayBook and consider it a junk, they have the urge to telling others that PB is junk to lessen the feels that they did the wrong move.
While others still stick to their PB, they already made a choice and hate it when other people told them what to do and whatnot.
We can argue about specs or performance but shouldn't argue about choices that people made.
To the Original Poster...
I am trying to understand how exactly you showed up the IPad user next to you.
Are you implying that his device can't listen to music while playing games?
Are you implying that the playbook has superior games to play?
You realize that he could listen to music AND play angry birds, right? Im also going to assume that you know he had the choice of thousands of good games whereas you had 1 or 2 (deadspace & NFS are the only two decent PB games, both on the iPad btw). Had he fired up Netflix, skype, Flipboard etc what would you have come back at him with? Calculator?
I like the PB but seriously, its hardly competetion.
This post was meant only as a humourous comparison but thank you for bringing your concerns to light. I will immediately notify the council for ethical amateur tablet reviewers that my comparisons are biased.
My mistake then, I assumed it was a showdown. It was very humerous so good job there.
This is a great point and one that I did not make in my original post. The person sitting next to me was unable to comfortably hold the iPad in one hand so he had to place it in his lap and hunch over it. Meanwhile, I could easily hold my PB in one hand and rest it on my tray table. IMHO the ipad just looks cumbersome in an economy seat. As a previous iPad user, I can say that they are not particulary comfortable to hold in one hand for any period of time.
I think you replied to the wrong guy...or else you didn't get my sarcasm. In any case, I'm struggling to understand what you're trying to say amidst all that bitterness.
It sounds like if you would have challenged the IPad user to a wrist curling contest with tablets, you would have really given him a smackdown he wouldn't soon forget.
Unfortunate that the iPad's trumping feature is native email. What email can you not acess via the web?