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Electronics Repair (sci.electronics.repair) Discussion of repairing electronic equipment. Topics include requests for assistance, where to obtain servicing information and parts, techniques for diagnosis and repair, and annecdotes about success, failures and problems. |
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#121
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In article , dave
wrote: I merely want to point out that memory is cheap, hearing is not. doesn't matter. you can't hear the difference. Psychoacoustics matters too and unheard artifacts can annoy one on a subliminal level. nonsense. if you can't hear it, it makes no difference whatsoever. double-blind tests have proven this time and time again. |
#123
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On 04/12/2014 02:45 PM, The Real Bev wrote:
Good writers who don't say something stupid or that I know to be wrong get more trust. Most people are assholes. Haven't you discovered that? Only on Usenet. And those who comment on news articles, of course. But face-to-face, no. I deal with the general public in a seasonal retail situation on a daily basis, and I find that most by far are decent, honest folk. TJ |
#124
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![]() "josephkk" wrote in message ... On Tue, 08 Apr 2014 11:16:05 -0400, TJ wrote: Buying a cellphone, especially the first one, is very different. First-time buyers don't know what they don't know. Since this is relatively new technology aimed partially at first-time buyers, the decent thing is to provide more and better explanation. Unless the intent is to screw the customers, of course. Every motor vehicle I've ever owned had a spec for how many miles you can drive on a tankful of fuel. And none of those vehicles met that spec in Real Life. TJ Real bad leadfoot eh? ?-) I told a friend the other day that I drove a Ford Focus Digital Edition. "What's that then ?" he asked. "I've never heard of that model". "Ah... " said I. "It only has two speeds - going and stopped ..." d:-) Needless to say, I don't get very good mpg ... Arfa |
#125
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On Sat, 12 Apr 2014 14:08:30 -0400, nospam wrote:
if you can't hear it, it makes no difference whatsoever. Tell that to an epileptic driving north past a stand of roadside trees at sunset. Can't hear the rapid cycling of sun and shade, but it can sure trigger a fit. (You're welcome.) Cheers, -- tlvp -- Avant de repondre, jeter la poubelle, SVP. |
#126
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On 04/12/2014 11:08 AM, nospam wrote:
In article , dave wrote: I merely want to point out that memory is cheap, hearing is not. doesn't matter. you can't hear the difference. Psychoacoustics matters too and unheard artifacts can annoy one on a subliminal level. nonsense. if you can't hear it, it makes no difference whatsoever. double-blind tests have proven this time and time again. I guess Fraunhofer[sic] wasted their money then. |
#127
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On 04/12/2014 09:40 PM, tlvp wrote:
On Sat, 12 Apr 2014 14:08:30 -0400, nospam wrote: if you can't hear it, it makes no difference whatsoever. Tell that to an epileptic driving north past a stand of roadside trees at sunset. Can't hear the rapid cycling of sun and shade, but it can sure trigger a fit. (You're welcome.) Cheers, -- tlvp Autistic people can see with their skin. http://www.aes.org/events/129/broadc...sions/?ID=2411 Seminar on psychoacoustics and listening fatigue and digital playback |
#128
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In article , dave
wrote: I merely want to point out that memory is cheap, hearing is not. doesn't matter. you can't hear the difference. Psychoacoustics matters too and unheard artifacts can annoy one on a subliminal level. nonsense. if you can't hear it, it makes no difference whatsoever. double-blind tests have proven this time and time again. I guess Fraunhofer[sic] wasted their money then. mp3 works by removing what you can't hear. |
#129
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Den 13-04-2014, skrev nospam:
In article , dave wrote: I merely want to point out that memory is cheap, hearing is not. doesn't matter. you can't hear the difference. Psychoacoustics matters too and unheard artifacts can annoy one on a subliminal level. nonsense. if you can't hear it, it makes no difference whatsoever. double-blind tests have proven this time and time again. I guess Fraunhofer[sic] wasted their money then. mp3 works by removing what you can't hear. By removing what can't be heard in noisy environments and/or on bad equipment. I'm not sure if mp3's by themselves removes dynamics, or if it is possible to keep the original dynamics. Leif -- Husk kørelys bagpå, hvis din bilfabrikant har taget den idiotiske beslutning at undlade det. |
#130
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In article , Leif Neland
wrote: I guess Fraunhofer[sic] wasted their money then. mp3 works by removing what you can't hear. By removing what can't be heard in noisy environments and/or on bad equipment. nope. it's in normal listening conditions, including using top quality equipment. in a double-blind test, people consistently *can't* tell the difference. I'm not sure if mp3's by themselves removes dynamics, or if it is possible to keep the original dynamics. they don't, since a quality mp3 is indistinguishable from the original. again, double-blind tests confirm this. |
#131
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On Sun, 13 Apr 2014 21:18:39 -0400, nospam
wrote: In article , Leif Neland wrote: I guess Fraunhofer[sic] wasted their money then. mp3 works by removing what you can't hear. By removing what can't be heard in noisy environments and/or on bad equipment. nope. it's in normal listening conditions, including using top quality equipment. in a double-blind test, people consistently *can't* tell the difference. I'm not sure if mp3's by themselves removes dynamics, or if it is possible to keep the original dynamics. they don't, since a quality mp3 is indistinguishable from the original. again, double-blind tests confirm this. How about some links to these double blind tests? I'd like to see the details of how they were performed. |
#132
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On Sat, 12 Apr 2014 11:45:24 -0700, The Real Bev
wrote: On 04/11/2014 05:57 PM, wrote: On Fri, 11 Apr 2014 15:25:33 -0700, The Real Bev wrote: On 04/08/2014 08:10 PM, wrote: On Tue, 8 Apr 2014 18:42:57 +0000 (UTC), "Danny D." wrote: On Tue, 08 Apr 2014 18:15:52 +0000, Danny D. wrote: However, look at this PC Magazine review of the phone: http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2411883,00.asp And look at the (much worse) CNET review of the phone: http://www.cnet.com/products/lg-optimus-l9-t-mobile/ While they did correctly summarize that the T-Mobile L9 "comes preloaded with too much bloatware, they never stated that there was only 600MB of usable storage space for apps. They repeated, in the so-called review "the L9 has way too much bloatware", but they never said how much was left for them, as a user, to store apps. And this reptition don't spur you to find an answer to your question yourself? Where, if not the sources previously listed, might one look for this information? Thus far nobody has answered that question. If you read a dozen articles and NOBODY mentions the fact that (a) there's not a lot of internal memory available to additional apps the user might want to download and (b) that the external sdcard can't be used to run applications, there's no reason to suspect that either of those things might be true. But when they say there is too much bloatware, won't you wonder what the consequences of that were? Annoyance at having to delete it just so you don't have to look at it. Like ads. I'm not going to respond to them and I just don't want to look at them. I'm trying to decide whether I would assume they took up significant amounts of space or not, but I'm leaning toward "How could a company be stupid enough to put all this crap on something if it keeps users from doing something else that they want to do?" They do. It's a different issue. It's there. When I'm told there's lots of bloatware, my first response would be "how much and what does it cause to happen?". How about asking on the section for the phone of interest on any of the more than a few android forums. Of course if you don't trust anyone, then no source will be of value. Good writers who don't say something stupid or that I know to be wrong get more trust. Most people are assholes. Haven't you discovered that? You just convinced me. Paranoid assholes are the worst. Considering the fact that they glossed over the fact there was only 600MB of usable memory, can you blame a naive consumer for thinking what they do? They'd never sell the phone if they told the truth! |
#133
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Posted to comp.mobile.android,alt.cellular.t-mobile,sci.electronics.repair
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nospam sendte dette med sin computer:
I'm not sure if mp3's by themselves removes dynamics, or if it is possible to keep the original dynamics. they don't, since a quality mp3 is indistinguishable from the original. again, double-blind tests confirm this. So it is deliberate by the mp3-"producers", that Dark Side of the Moon has twice the dynamics on CD as on mp3. Leif -- Husk kørelys bagpå, hvis din bilfabrikant har taget den idiotiske beslutning at undlade det. |
#134
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On 04/13/2014 11:36 AM, nospam wrote:
In article , dave wrote: I merely want to point out that memory is cheap, hearing is not. doesn't matter. you can't hear the difference. Psychoacoustics matters too and unheard artifacts can annoy one on a subliminal level. nonsense. if you can't hear it, it makes no difference whatsoever. double-blind tests have proven this time and time again. I guess Fraunhofer[sic] wasted their money then. mp3 works by removing what you can't hear. I know what perceptual coding means. |
#135
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On 04/13/2014 06:18 PM, nospam wrote:
In article , Leif Neland wrote: I guess Fraunhofer[sic] wasted their money then. mp3 works by removing what you can't hear. By removing what can't be heard in noisy environments and/or on bad equipment. nope. it's in normal listening conditions, including using top quality equipment. in a double-blind test, people consistently *can't* tell the difference. I'm not sure if mp3's by themselves removes dynamics, or if it is possible to keep the original dynamics. they don't, since a quality mp3 is indistinguishable from the original. again, double-blind tests confirm this. Please show us the "double blind" testing of which you speak. |
#136
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On 04/12/2014 04:44 PM, TJ wrote:
On 04/12/2014 02:45 PM, The Real Bev wrote: Good writers who don't say something stupid or that I know to be wrong get more trust. Most people are assholes. Haven't you discovered that? Only on Usenet. And those who comment on news articles, of course. But face-to-face, no. I deal with the general public in a seasonal retail situation on a daily basis, and I find that most by far are decent, honest folk. That doesn't mean they're not assholes. When I was in school I worked for Bullock's and Sears. I was really good at helping people even if they WERE assholes, but that doesn't mean I didn't want to slap them silly. The members of the general public that I come in contact with are generally people I'd rather not come in contact with I sometimes read others' comments under facebook posts or news articles and the vast majority should have just sat on their hands. Even my 'friends' sometimes say things I wish they hadn't, but they probably think the same of me. Anyway, I am truly thankful for usenet. Less so for facebook, but I'm still glad it's there. -- Cheers, Bev ------------------------------------------------------------------ "If you were trying to be offensive, you would have succeeded if I hadn't realized you have no idea what you are talking about." -- FernandoP |
#137
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Posted to comp.mobile.android,alt.cellular.t-mobile,sci.electronics.repair
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![]() "tlvp" wrote in message ... On Sat, 12 Apr 2014 14:08:30 -0400, nospam wrote: if you can't hear it, it makes no difference whatsoever. Tell that to an epileptic driving north past a stand of roadside trees at sunset. Can't hear the rapid cycling of sun and shade, but it can sure trigger a fit. (You're welcome.) Cheers, -- tlvp -- Avant de repondre, jeter la poubelle, SVP. I'm not sure I'm following that line of reasoning. Surely, that has nothing to do with hearing ? Arfa |
#138
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Arfa Daily skrev:
"tlvp" wrote in message ... On Sat, 12 Apr 2014 14:08:30 -0400, nospam wrote: if you can't hear it, it makes no difference whatsoever. Tell that to an epileptic driving north past a stand of roadside trees at sunset. Can't hear the rapid cycling of sun and shade, but it can sure trigger a fit. (You're welcome.) Cheers, -- tlvp -- Avant de repondre, jeter la poubelle, SVP. I'm not sure I'm following that line of reasoning. Surely, that has nothing to do with hearing ? It is a (stupid) comment to "if you can't hear it, it makes no difference whatsoever" There are lots of things, you cannot hear, which makes a difference, like light, smell, heat, chemicals. But they are irrelevant in relation to the sound of mp3's Leif -- Husk kørelys bagpå, hvis din bilfabrikant har taget den idiotiske beslutning at undlade det. |
#139
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Posted to comp.mobile.android,alt.cellular.t-mobile,sci.electronics.repair
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On Thu, 10 Apr 2014 00:42:59 -0700, josephkk
wrote: On Wed, 09 Apr 2014 06:22:40 -0700, dave wrote: this isn't about grados versus cheap $2 headphones included with a device. obviously there would be a difference between those. this is about mp3/aac versus uncompressed, a difference which is inaudible. and this isn't a matter of my opinion or anyone elses opinion. once again, in double-blind tests, people consistently *can't* tell which is which. set up your own double-blind test and you'll get the same results everyone else who has done so. they do no better than chance. Oh. So now by headphones you mean ear buds? I never said Apple owned aac. I asked you what flavor aac you are talking about? When I got my iPod Touch v3 I tried Apple aac and it sounded like doggie waste in a leaky bag. Again, you say an MP3 at 320k sounds as good as an uncompressed file and I say at 320k there is very little Mpeg compression happening. The device has 32 GB SSD and it has never been more than half full, even with all my .wav files (Apple won't play flac or vorb files). If you are having storage issues there are plenty of cloud solutions. Let's see, how to say this? So you believe like most audiophools that the marketing swill in audio magazines is more reliable than actual properly performed scientific tests? Have you ever tried managing over 10,000 tracks of music in any form? BTW i use flac as a matter of personal choice, because it is lossless like PKzip. Not that i can discern any difference even with my best equipment between 256k mp3 and flac. I have done A vs B testing and honest enough that for most of my material 256k/s mp3 is effectively distinguishable from flac or wav. Umm make that indistinguishable. Suck it up. ?-) |
#140
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On Fri, 11 Apr 2014 07:35:26 -0700, dave wrote:
On 04/11/2014 01:16 AM, wrote: On Thu, 10 Apr 2014 00:42:59 -0700, josephkk wrote: BTW i use flac as a matter of personal choice, because it is lossless like PKzip. Not that i can discern any difference even with my best equipment between 256k mp3 and flac. I have done A vs B testing and honest enough that for most of my material 256k/s mp3 is effectively distinguishable from flac or wav. Suck it up. ?-) And yet many find that CD and SACD are indistinguishable when made from the same master. Often the SACD versions are remastered so sound different. On a similar line, I was using an aptX Bluetooth receiver in my bedroom to feed an Onkyo stereo receiver and AudioEngine P4 speakers. Switching to a source that also uses aptX was instantly distinguishable from standard Bluetooth on the same streaming Internet radio music. We have the audiofools on one side, that believes in magic, and the audio atheists on the other, who thinks everything sounds the same. Both are wrong. I merely want to point out that memory is cheap, hearing is not. And that Android file manager will tell you the device can only be used to store or transfer "flac" and "wav" files, when the default player gladly renders beautiful sound when fed these massive files. It must be a deal with Microsoft or something. "flac" is open source. MP3 is not. Mp3 is a patented compression technology. M$ does not own it, but patent trolls do. Be glad that patents expire. ?-) |
#141
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Posted to comp.mobile.android,alt.cellular.t-mobile,sci.electronics.repair
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On Sat, 12 Apr 2014 11:45:24 -0700, The Real Bev
wrote: On 04/11/2014 05:57 PM, wrote: On Fri, 11 Apr 2014 15:25:33 -0700, The Real Bev wrote: On 04/08/2014 08:10 PM, wrote: On Tue, 8 Apr 2014 18:42:57 +0000 (UTC), "Danny D." wrote: On Tue, 08 Apr 2014 18:15:52 +0000, Danny D. wrote: However, look at this PC Magazine review of the phone: http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2411883,00.asp And look at the (much worse) CNET review of the phone: http://www.cnet.com/products/lg-optimus-l9-t-mobile/ While they did correctly summarize that the T-Mobile L9 "comes preloaded with too much bloatware, they never stated that there was only 600MB of usable storage space for apps. They repeated, in the so-called review "the L9 has way too much bloatware", but they never said how much was left for them, as a user, to store apps. And this reptition don't spur you to find an answer to your question yourself? Where, if not the sources previously listed, might one look for this information? Thus far nobody has answered that question. If you read a dozen articles and NOBODY mentions the fact that (a) there's not a lot of internal memory available to additional apps the user might want to download and (b) that the external sdcard can't be used to run applications, there's no reason to suspect that either of those things might be true. But when they say there is too much bloatware, won't you wonder what the consequences of that were? Annoyance at having to delete it just so you don't have to look at it. Like ads. I'm not going to respond to them and I just don't want to look at them. I'm trying to decide whether I would assume they took up significant amounts of space or not, but I'm leaning toward "How could a company be stupid enough to put all this crap on something if it keeps users from doing something else that they want to do?" Um, the advertisers pay them to do so? Of course they do. How about asking on the section for the phone of interest on any of the more than a few android forums. Of course if you don't trust anyone, then no source will be of value. Good writers who don't say something stupid or that I know to be wrong get more trust. Most people are assholes. Haven't you discovered that? Or willful idiots. Considering the fact that they glossed over the fact there was only 600MB of usable memory, can you blame a naive consumer for thinking what they do? They'd never sell the phone if they told the truth! |
#142
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On 04/15/2014 04:03 AM, josephkk wrote:
On Fri, 11 Apr 2014 07:35:26 -0700, dave wrote: I merely want to point out that memory is cheap, hearing is not. And that Android file manager will tell you the device can only be used to store or transfer "flac" and "wav" files, when the default player gladly renders beautiful sound when fed these massive files. It must be a deal with Microsoft or something. "flac" is open source. MP3 is not. Mp3 is a patented compression technology. M$ does not own it, but patent trolls do. Be glad that patents expire. ?-) ..wav is Microsoft .mp3 is Fraunhofer .aac is Coding Technologies. flac and vorb are open source. |
#143
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Posted to comp.mobile.android,alt.cellular.t-mobile,sci.electronics.repair
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On 04/14/2014 07:13 PM, The Real Bev wrote:
On 04/12/2014 04:44 PM, TJ wrote: On 04/12/2014 02:45 PM, The Real Bev wrote: Good writers who don't say something stupid or that I know to be wrong get more trust. Most people are assholes. Haven't you discovered that? Only on Usenet. And those who comment on news articles, of course. But face-to-face, no. I deal with the general public in a seasonal retail situation on a daily basis, and I find that most by far are decent, honest folk. That doesn't mean they're not assholes. When I was in school I worked for Bullock's and Sears. I was really good at helping people even if they WERE assholes, but that doesn't mean I didn't want to slap them silly. The members of the general public that I come in contact with are generally people I'd rather not come in contact with I sometimes read others' comments under facebook posts or news articles and the vast majority should have just sat on their hands. Even my 'friends' sometimes say things I wish they hadn't, but they probably think the same of me. Anyway, I am truly thankful for usenet. Less so for facebook, but I'm still glad it's there. Each of us has his dark side, and occasionally each of us lets it escape. That doesn't mean that we are all always like that. I feel sad that you seem to have such a bitterness inside. Someone, sometime, must have hurt you very deeply. TJ |
#144
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Posted to comp.mobile.android,alt.cellular.t-mobile,sci.electronics.repair
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Paul Miner wrote:
They might have sold fewer, granted, but I'd venture to guess that most people don't care, or they don't know that they don't care. Kids will care when they can't download a game to the phone. |
#145
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On Tue, 08 Apr 2014 20:12:14 -0700, it was written:
If enough L9 customers cared, there'd be a groundswell for a class action suit. I guess I missed it. There are many similar complaints on the LG web and on Amazon for the L9. Don't know if there are enough for a CAS though. |
#146
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Posted to comp.mobile.android,alt.cellular.t-mobile,sci.electronics.repair
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Arfa Daily wrote:
is not the same as the pre-installed bloatware not being moveable. I think that is more to do with them not wanting that to be /re/ movable, which of course it would be if you could shift it to the card ... T-Mo doesn't want you to remove all their self-serving adware! If you could /move/ an app to the sd card, you could subsequently /delete/ that app outside of the phone. |
#147
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Posted to comp.mobile.android,alt.cellular.t-mobile,sci.electronics.repair
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Michael Black wrote, on Tue, 08 Apr 2014 14:22:06 -0400:
Well that's one reason to buy used or cheap to begin with Good point. I learned how to skid into a guardrail in icy conditions on my first (used) card. Thank god it was a clunker! This L9 seems to be a clunker. I read most of the reviews on Amazon and it seems like the only ones happy with it are people who never had a phone before and they're just overjoyed that the thing can show videos on youtube. No serious smartphone user would even think it usable though so I don't know how the op was tricked since the phone specs, even taken at face value, suck. With only 4gb to start with, and everyone knows that the sd card can't be used, nobody in his right mind should buy this phone, even as a gift. |
#148
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Paul Miner wrote:
I went another way when I bought my first smart phone and got what was then a better-than-average device, the Galaxy S3. As it turned out, I like it quite a lot, but there are obvious risks associated with not buying cheap. Anyone can buy a great $700 phone but it takes an expert Android user to buy a good $200 phone. The only good $200 phone I know of is the 16gb MOTO-G. Do you know of any other 16GB $200 phones? |
#149
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On Tue, 15 Apr 2014 20:04:32 +0000 (UTC), Kerry Blethan
wrote: Paul Miner wrote: They might have sold fewer, granted, but I'd venture to guess that most people don't care, or they don't know that they don't care. Kids will care when they can't download a game to the phone. Poor babies! |
#150
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On Tue, 15 Apr 2014 15:36:22 -0500, Rodruigo Garcia
wrote: Michael Black wrote, on Tue, 08 Apr 2014 14:22:06 -0400: Well that's one reason to buy used or cheap to begin with Good point. I learned how to skid into a guardrail in icy conditions on my first (used) card. Thank god it was a clunker! This L9 seems to be a clunker. I read most of the reviews on Amazon and it seems like the only ones happy with it are people who never had a phone before and they're just overjoyed that the thing can show videos on youtube. No serious smartphone user would even think it usable though so I don't know how the op was tricked since the phone specs, even taken at face value, suck. Really? Define "serious smartphone user". Not everyone needs gobs of memory. With only 4gb to start with, and everyone knows that the sd card can't be used, nobody in his right mind should buy this phone, even as a gift. |
#151
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Posted to comp.mobile.android,alt.cellular.t-mobile,sci.electronics.repair
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Kerry Blethan wrote:
Anyone can buy a great $700 phone but it takes an expert Android user to buy a good $200 phone. Excellent summary! -- chris |
#152
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On Sun, 20 Apr 2014 11:17:58 +0100, "Chris Uppal"
wrote: Kerry Blethan wrote: Anyone can buy a great $700 phone but it takes an expert Android user to buy a good $200 phone. Not really. You just have to do some research. Lots of people by great cars for $20,000 without having to be an automotive engineer or even a mechanic. Excellent summary! -- chris |
#153
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Posted to comp.mobile.android,alt.cellular.t-mobile,sci.electronics.repair
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![]() wrote in message ... On Tue, 15 Apr 2014 20:04:32 +0000 (UTC), Kerry Blethan wrote: Paul Miner wrote: They might have sold fewer, granted, but I'd venture to guess that most people don't care, or they don't know that they don't care. Kids will care when they can't download a game to the phone. Poor babies! That's an odd thing to say. Kids are major customers for these phones, and for an awful lot of them, the fact of it being a phone is only one small consideration. A 'smart'-phone is better defined as a hand-held computer, and that is how they are sold, so kids will rightly expect to be able to download and use gaming apps, in much the same way as I expect to be able to download and use apps that satisfy my requirements ... Arfa |
#154
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On Wed, 23 Apr 2014 01:48:16 +0100, "Arfa Daily"
wrote: wrote in message .. . On Tue, 15 Apr 2014 20:04:32 +0000 (UTC), Kerry Blethan wrote: Paul Miner wrote: They might have sold fewer, granted, but I'd venture to guess that most people don't care, or they don't know that they don't care. Kids will care when they can't download a game to the phone. Poor babies! That's an odd thing to say. Kids are major customers for these phones, and for an awful lot of them, the fact of it being a phone is only one small consideration. A 'smart'-phone is better defined as a hand-held computer, and that is how they are sold, so kids will rightly expect to be able to download and use gaming apps, in much the same way as I expect to be able to download and use apps that satisfy my requirements ... Arfa Kids are major customers for anything that keeps their attention so parents don't have to deal with them. Kids are not entitled to smartphones and games on them. Kids need more than access to computers and games at all times. Putting a kid on a computer to play is not parenting. It's not hard to see why the product of our education system is waining. |
#155
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#156
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On Wed, 23 Apr 2014 02:17:44 -0400, tlvp
wrote: On Tue, 22 Apr 2014 19:14:53 -0700, wrote: ... why the product of our education system is waining. Yup. The product "is waining" ... 'cuz the system is *faling* :-) . Cheers, -- tlvp And the system includes the parents, the kids, and the schools and teachers. The land of opportunity has morphed into the land of entitlement. |
#157
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On 04/23/2014 02:17 AM, tlvp wrote:
On Tue, 22 Apr 2014 19:14:53 -0700, wrote: ... why the product of our education system is waining. Yup. The product "is waining" ... 'cuz the system is *faling* :-) . Cheers, -- tlvp One could possess the best education possible, yet still be fumble-fingered and careless. In my rather limited experience, the higher the education, the more overconfident, and the more prone to carelessness. And, the less forgiving of carelessness in others. TJ |
#158
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On Wed, 23 Apr 2014 09:29:45 -0400, TJ wrote:
On 04/23/2014 02:17 AM, tlvp wrote: On Tue, 22 Apr 2014 19:14:53 -0700, wrote: ... why the product of our education system is waining. Yup. The product "is waining" ... 'cuz the system is *faling* :-) . Cheers, -- tlvp One could possess the best education possible, yet still be fumble-fingered and careless. In my rather limited experience, the higher the education, the more overconfident, and the more prone to carelessness. And, the less forgiving of carelessness in others. TJ People can be "fumble-fingered and careless" regardlesst of their level of education. Unless you have some real evidence to back up your claim that "the higher the education, the more overconfident, and the more prone to carelessness". You did say "In my rather limited experience", so perhaps you should get more education and see if it makes you "fumble-fingered and careless". But I will still support improving the education level in the country and take the risk of you unbased claims. |
#159
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On 04/23/2014 04:32 PM, wrote:
On Wed, 23 Apr 2014 09:29:45 -0400, TJ wrote: On 04/23/2014 02:17 AM, tlvp wrote: On Tue, 22 Apr 2014 19:14:53 -0700, wrote: ... why the product of our education system is waining. Yup. The product "is waining" ... 'cuz the system is *faling* :-) . Cheers, -- tlvp One could possess the best education possible, yet still be fumble-fingered and careless. In my rather limited experience, the higher the education, the more overconfident, and the more prone to carelessness. And, the less forgiving of carelessness in others. TJ People can be "fumble-fingered and careless" regardlesst of their level of education. Unless you have some real evidence to back up your claim that "the higher the education, the more overconfident, and the more prone to carelessness". You did say "In my rather limited experience", so perhaps you should get more education and see if it makes you "fumble-fingered and careless". But I will still support improving the education level in the country and take the risk of you unbased claims. My post wasn't aimed at you. It was aimed at the person who pointed out your obvious typos, implying that they negated your point. There are many kinds of education. I have a BSEE, so I am not entirely uneducated in the sense that you mean in your posts. I am also the son and grandson of men who, while they never completed high school, were some of the smartest people that I've ever known - in the ways that really matter. From time to time I find myself fumble-fingered when it comes to typing, and careless when in a hurry or when my mind is on something else. I am, after all, human - a point my father and grandfather took great pains to teach me. Most of those I've met who can put strings of letters after their names won't readily admit to that kind of thing, even though I've seen them make as many or more mistakes than I do. TJ |
#160
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![]() "tlvp" wrote in message ... On Tue, 22 Apr 2014 19:14:53 -0700, wrote: ... why the product of our education system is waining. Yup. The product "is waining" ... 'cuz the system is *faling* :-) . Cheers, -- tlvp :-) Arfa |
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