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  • Member Since May 23rd, 2006
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Yes there is a service advisory, not a recall. The attachment point of the antenna is failing. You just have to call at&t XBM and they will set up a warranty exchange. I already did and sent my broken one back. I would assume you do have to have current at&t service, because it goes through their warranty exchange, not Samsung.
My 15" 2.4ghz MBP purchased at an Apple Store on Wednesday did not have the new adapter. Not that I expected it to...
Yeah and when the black razr came out, it was $200.

How many razrs did you see when they were $500
My Holux 236 works from inside my glove compartment so I don't think this will have a problem
Ok I’m a Windows Mobile fan. I’ve had 3 HTC designed iPaqs 3 HTC Smartphones , and 2 HTC PPC Phones, but the lack of innovation is what’s holding windows mobile back. We haven’t had a major bump in processing power since 400mhz became standard with the Intel XScale chips 5 years ago. HTC hasn’t really changed form factors since the introduction of the Wizard 2 years ago. What does the Kaiser really introduce? Built in GPS – that’s nice but I already have a Bluetooth GPS. The extra memory is nice, but I haven’t had any out of memory problems on my 8525. The tilt up screen? I think that would actually be more uncomfortable than the flat screen. 3MP camera isn’t bad, but that will probably just mean a bigger bad image.

All these things are nice, but they aren’t going to make me dump my 8525. The only reason I upgraded from an 8125 was 3G. HTC basically IS windows mobile, and it’s time for them to start innovating.
And apparently not smart enough to click the links in the article either.

Thanks for proving my point.
Aggies aren't smart enough to change lanes.
Thats impressive since this is the first RC
Just to be clear,

Dell introduced none of the features you mentioned. WiFi and 400mhz processors were first available in the Toshiba e740. The first VGA PPC was the Toshiba e800.

That said, Dell was the first to bring these features to low cost PPC’s.

Non connected PPC’s are dead anyway.
Until I see something different displayed on that outside display, I won't believe it. Looks too much like a mockup to me.
Let the hive mind of Engadget get that for you.
"I'm looking for a wireless trackpad to use with my older (2.5 or so years old) C2D MacBook that's perpetually docked to my home theater. Something sleek, thin, not too small, made of high quality materials. Ideally, it would natively support all of (Snow) Leopard's multitouch inputs, and even more ideally, it would have a charging dock / base. The only problem is that I'm not sure that such a thing even exists. Think you can throw me a bone?"
 

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