On Jan 13, 6:42*am, "Google Charges ETF For Nexus One On Top of
Carrier's ETF" <vic.hea...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Jan 12, 11:11*pm, "Google Charges ETF For Nexus One On Top ofCarrier's ETF" <vic.hea...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > Well I warned them to only buy an iPhone and you know who would not
> > listen ;>)
>
> > ANDROID PAIN CONTINUES
>
> >http://mobile.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1507764
>
> *BGR decided to get in touch with T-Mobile and it is pretty much
> confirmed: if you cancel after 14 days (again, 30 in California), T-
> Mobile will charge $200 for breaking the contract, and Google will
> charge the difference between the subsidized cost of the phone and its
> full price. Think long and hard before you make the purchase with a
> service plan: $200 ETF for T-Mobile, $350 for Google and $179 for the
> device itself will cost you $729 in the end if you cancel.
BIG ARTICLE IN NY TIMES PANS GOOGLE PHONE
01-12-2010
New owners of the Nexus One, the latest touch-screen smartphone to run
on Android, Google’s mobile operating system, have found themselves at
a loss when it comes to resolving problems with the handset. They
cannot call Google for help, and the company warns that it may take up
to 48 hours to respond to e-mail messages.
Unlike other phones that run on Android, like the Motorola Droid or
the T-Mobile G1, the Nexus One was developed and branded by Google and
is sold directly by the company to customers.
But ever since the phone went on sale Jan. 5, customer forums have
been filled with a cacophony of gripes about the Nexus One. And
Google, more accustomed to providing minimal support for its free
services, has been unprepared to deal with the higher service
expectations of customers who are paying as much as $529 for its high-
end smartphone.
NEXUS ONE PAIN IS REAL
Early buyers of the device, like Kiran Konathala, a 27-year-old
database programmer in Long Branch, N.J., have complained of dropped
calls, plodding download speeds and connectivity snags. “The hardware
is great, but the software is a mess,” he said. “It’s not been a happy
experience so far.”
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/13/te.../13google.html