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Posting this one from my brand new Android G1. I was looking for a wifi capable phone for quite sometime to ditch my aged Nokia N70 for. Certainly it had to run Linux, Java being a plus. So, G1 ...
Everyone knows the T-Mobile G1 had a QWERTY keyboard — it was one of the main differentiators between it and the slab that was the iPhone 3G. QWERTY keyboards defined the earliest days of Android.
Custom ROMs and rooting have been a part of the Android experience for many since pretty much day one. The T-Mobile G1 was rooted within a few weeks of its launch, and from then on, experimenting with ...
Now that the Android Market is sporting for-pay applications, users of the Android-based G1 can now download a mobile version of Guitar Hero World Tour and rock out via the phone’s touchscreen ...
Most G1 reviewers will probably agree that, in a nutshell, the software is nice but the hardware underwhelms.
T-Mobile, Google and HTC on Tuesday unveiled the first mobile device based on the open source Linux Google Android mobile operating system, the T-Mobile G1.
The new T-Mobile G1 wireless phone, with its Android open source platform, will be locked to the T-Mobile USA network and doesn't appear to be heavily focused on business users.
Someone did an application to detect metal using the Android G1. Is this because the G1 is more smartypanties than other smartphones? Is it magic perhaps?
T-Mobile's G1 is the first, and currently the only, handset to use the Android mobile stack. The second is likely to be Vodafone's Magic handset, which is also manufactured by HTC.
It's solidly built with beautiful screen quality, but the applications on board are by far the coolest feature of the handset.
The new T-Mobile G1 wireless phone, announced Tuesday by T-Mobile, Google, and HTC, generated attention for its use of the open Android platform, but it will be locked to the T-Mobile USA network ...