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Developers, developers, developers, developers

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What kinds of issues are those? I still have the phone so I can check for some of that stuff.

Periodic random shutdowns and reboots and increasingly inaccurate reporting battery charge level as time wears on. It starts pretty slow at first, but it gradually cascades into a point where it makes the phone unusable if you don't recognize the symptoms early enough. It's a known issue with the Sensation.
 
Remember old Nokia phones that technically never shut themselves down fully and still rang alarms even if off? So long as there's a battery and there's some charge on it, it's guaranteed to ring. Loudly.

I still have a Nokia phone, but it's a smartphone, and a modern one, to boot. Usually I never manage to get it run to 0% charge, so it's not a problem for me, and the alarm is loud enough. I do wonder if it can still ring while turned off, though. (Ringing while turned off is a possibility with Symbian-based OSes.)
 
I still prefer Safari on my Mac over Google Chrome, as i'm more used to it.

Also, I just installed the newest OS upgrade for my Mac, and despite an excruciatingly long download process, they actually refined everything quite well for it. Now if only it would stop being as slow as molasses...
 
Ew, Apple.

Personally I prefer Windows/Android. Never had many good experiences with Apple/iOS. Not even to mention that PC and Android tend to be more developer friendly then Apple, which always wins points with me. Let's not open that can of worms, though!

I have seriously never used the alarm on my phone or tablet... I tried once, and it didn't even work. Can't say I'm surprised. xD
 
How old is your Mac? If it's one that came installed with Snow Leopard, then that's kinda old at this point. :P

Apple logic: they'll support upgrades on old devices for quite a long time, but still increase hardware requirements.

I got mine for Christmas 2012 (a few days before then), and I just installed I think Mac OS Yosemite because I had to check for updates after moving back into my college dorm. So just over two years. Not terribly old. I even dug out my iPad 2 that i've had since mid-2011 so I could play something for the Year of Gaming event, and it still supported iOS 8.
 
But it has pretty decent specs for it's price, amirite?
- MediaTek Processor
- Android 4.2 (In 2013!)
The RAM/Memory/Camera seems decent though the camera depends on the software and lenses if its any good. Numbers don't mean everything. Though I haven't looked into the camera or anything to see if it is. Moto G 2014 4G LTE seems kinda better, plus support for updates, but the camera might take a hit.

As for Alarm clocks, I just use a regular one, well somewhat regular, its easier to set then most, but the screen is cracked. I don't really like using my phone as one, I don't even have the phone with me when I'm sleeping, it dosent get kept in my room

I had some trouble with random reboots on my Droid 3/4, mainly 3. But with my Moto X I haven't experienced it I don't think, my Nexus 10 still does though.

Android: Adding more smoother perfomance and animations while lowering hardware requirements.
Apple: Addings animations, worse performance, and highering hardware requirements.
:P
 
The first Nexus 7 2013 tablet I had owned had random reboots. They happened just about everyday, and it was annoying. I'll always remember the date I got my first tablet, because I was modded the same day here on PC. :P

However, I replaced the Nexus 7 at Best Buy three months later with another one, and it's the one I have to this day. I think it maybe only shut itself off then back on once, but that was probably after 20+ days of uptime as well. To this day. it stays turned on quite well.
 
I prefer using my phone /tablet as an alarm clock because it is easier to set. Especially when I can just tell Siri to set an alarm at a certain time. I will also set multiple alarms so that even if I snooze an alarm, one will go off a couple of minutes later to wake me up. This is handy when I know I'm going to be real tempted to try and sleep in.

These are things I can't do with my digital alarm clock.
 
I managed to sleep in until 4 PM one single time. Goodness me!

Hmm... Intel integrated is surprisingly passable when you think about it today.
 
Why on earth does this library computer at the school have Internet Explorer, and only Internet Explorer installed? It's version 9, too. :|

Things won't change until they have to change. (That, and Group Policy is much easier.)
 
The computers at the facilities where I reside have Chrome, Safari and Firefox installed. I remember in one of my classes where I couldn't view videos that we had made for it because I had been using Safari and it said I needed the right Flash plug-in, as my teacher suggested that was a Safari issue more than a computer issue.
 
This is handy when I know I'm going to be real tempted to try and sleep in.


This, oh my god.

Unrelated note. My android broke (temporarily, smh...) so I went ahead and picked up a Lumia.

Why aren't more people using Windows Phones, man? These things are smoother than the almighty knows what.
 
My main concern with this though is IE9's considerable lack of modern CSS support. View a profile here on PC from IE9 and see what I mean. ;)

I bet it's locked at IE 9 because some important web page app doesn't work in anything above IE 9. We only upgraded from IE 8 to IE 10 company-wide at my work in September because some web page applications use a web browser and only worked in IE 8 or older.
 
I bet it's locked at IE 9 because some important web page app doesn't work in anything above IE 9. We only upgraded from IE 8 to IE 10 company-wide at my work in September because some web page applications use a web browser and only worked in IE 8 or older.
I'd rather be more concerned with my browsing security than compatibility of one lonesome website; the website can be updated to become compatible with newer browsers. :P

What I don't get though is why the library computers at said campus of my college are only running IE 9, whereas (at least) two other campuses within the college have both IE 9 and Firefox.
 
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