Let the hive mind of Engadget get that for you.
"I finally got a new laptop with a lone USB 3.0 port. I'm now looking at getting a USB 3.0 hub with a power adapter so I can use both of my USB 3.0 hard drives at faster speeds. I've read lots of horror stories where some hubs either don't come with power adapters -- and as a consequence the portable drives don't work with them properly -- or they are designed poorly which results in USB 2.0 speeds. Or, the hard drives keep getting disconnected. Do your readers have any suggestions or experience using USB 3.0 hubs? Thanks!"
While the late adopters to Android (Verizon and Sprint) are getting premier Snapdragon devices T-Mobile (The original adopter) gets BS like this. .:Sad Panda Face:.
@Akulamenuri
Nexus One on T-Mobile not good enough? :(
@ChazClout I would count it, if I could buy it through T-Mobile. I have a cheap legacy contract, no point buying a phone outright when it doesn't save me any money.
@ChazClout nexus 1 was good enough 6 months ago. Unfortunately they got leap frogged severely.
@tad604
How has it been severely leapfrogged? It has a 1Ghz snapdragon, 512MB ram, an AMOLED display, and decent camera and flash, and it is running 2.2. That seems to stack up pretty well against its competition, both android and otherwise. What's missing?
NOTE: this is an actual question, not a snarky comment. I'm considering an N1 but weighing my options.
@tad604 Leapfrogged? They're the first with Froyo. 8MP and HDMI out? No thanks, I'd rather have the latest virgin build of 2.2.
@tad604 Everything about your statement is false.
The only thing that's outdated about the N1 is the trackball, in the age of optical pads. But even at launch, that decision had people scratching their heads, it's not even something thats happened with time. It happened with the first leaked picture months ahead of launch.
The N1 is still as awesome as it was day 1, and if it were on Verizon I'd choose it over an Incredible or Droid X.
@Akulamenuri
Snapdragons are not that powerful nowdays, TI OMAP and Hummingbird are the greatest now.
@tad604
N1 is still perfectly capable, and it's probably the fastest Android phone available right now due to 2.2 being on it officially.