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Engadget Android 4.0 (Ice Cream Sandwich) review (engadget.com)
46 points by _ea1k on Dec 2, 2011 | hide | past | favorite | 10 comments


I'm using a crippled DroidX with Motoblur variant (ex. can't hide blockbuster app, limited homescreens, etc) and I've found a solution for waiting for the table scraps to filter down from Android releases: Go Launcher X (no root needed)

With home screen replacement apps you can more or less configure whatever you want on your mobile and strip out the stuff you don't want: http://www.addictivetips.com/mobile/10-awesome-go-launcher-e...


Or.... you can go (and later support) Cyanogenmod

http://wiki.cyanogenmod.com/wiki/Motorola_Droid_X:_Full_Upda...


I have a Galaxy S2, and it's a great phone, but why should I have to do that?

I can't get rid of bloat-ware or even stop it from running without rooting my phone and voiding my warranty. I don't have root access to a device I own, which seems bizarre if you think of it as a mobile computer.

Imagine the uproar if all Windows PCs now came with un-stoppable and uninstallable bloatware, and without admin/root privileges.


"imagine the uproar if all windows computers came with..."

That's the thing though - all android phones don't come like that. If you wanted an unlocked and clean phone you could have bought one. You made the choice to get a locked down phone filled with crappy carrier apps, in exchange for a lower price. if people had the choice to get a windows PC for $50 in exchange for some preinstalled apps and no admin access, you'd better believe they would. The reason carrier subsidized phones are more popular is that most people dont care. If you care, don't buy a phone you don't like.


if people had the choice to get a windows PC for $50 in exchange for some preinstalled apps and no admin access, you'd better believe they would.

They did try and it didn't work. Why? because PCs are abundant and the companies that wanted to do subsidized PCs couldn't get the economics to work. The smart ones realized that PCs were getting cheaper anyway so just wait a little bit. Others realized they could put it on credit and still come out ahead. Only the ones really bad with money/poor credit went the subsidized route (pay us now, and then pay us $40/mo indefinitely).

Phones are slightly different. The service doesn't get much cheaper whether you buy up front or subsidized. And unlike PCs, the price of phones hasn't dropped, the features just got better. And do to wireless restrictions of competition the price of plans hasn't dropped either.

For example, I just renewed my plan. I could pay $600 and buy my own phone. The carrier was going to knock $10/mo off my calling plan. Either way I was going to be locked in for the next 2 years. So I could shell out $600 and save $240 or I could only spend $100. I looked at the PAYG plans but due to my volume of calls it would cost more than the calling plan.

People aren't as naive as you think. They know they are going into this deal at a severe disadvantage so they might as well make the most of it.


Not that I disagree on your main point about buying carrier subsidized phones, but many unlocked phones you purchase for full price still contain bloatware installed by the manufacturer, and still need to be rooted.


I hear you, but I don't want to kill my warranty & I'm not particularly interested in spending a lot of time following a 35-step process to add functionality to a silly mobile phone.

All I want to do is to very quickly get it to work well and look nice and be done with it... THEN maybe I get to use the damn thing to talk to my friends =)


true - unfortunately, if bloatware doesnt get you, then forced obsolescence will (no ice cream for you !)

sooner or later, you will have to get on the open source bandwagon... and Cyanogenmod is where its at.


Which is the reason my next phone will be a Google Galaxy Nexus, or whatever official phone Google will release next.

I have a Galaxy S (1) and I'm still on Froyo, even though the Gingerbread upgrade should have been available for me, but isn't.


The default fonts in Ice Cream Sandwich seem much too small to me.




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