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OK, fair enough, I'm mixing two things up. I was assuming that a shell on Linux means ssh but of course it doesn't. It used to be that you had to jailbreak an iphone to get an ssh app on there, but perhaps that is no longer the case.
So I struggle to understand the straightjacket iPhone system at times.
So really, the 2007 iPhone straightjacket really isn't all that different than the Mac straightjacket from 1984.
Client SSH apps have always existed on the iPhone (and assume on Android),
There's been a lot of press about the lack of SW updates for Android phones. Just looking at the wikipedia you can see the fragmentation. Here's a pretty eye-chart that details the issue even further. Bottom line, don't expect to get a major software update, which will could lock you out of updates or new apps.
It used to be that you had to jailbreak an iphone to get an ssh app on there, but perhaps that is no longer the case.
Thanks for that, it's very enlightening. It's been awhile in this thread, but (I think?) it reinforces my point that a phone is not / should not be like a computer. In the sense that it is what it is when you buy it. "Upgrades" are a bonus. Honestly, the delta up to iOS5 on my 3gs is fairly marginal, and I'm not entirely sure that it's not actually a step backwards (hard to tell given the physical issues that phone is having).The system set up by the telcos whereby most people renew a contract and get a new phone every two years works against this as well. Why do upgrades matter if you're just going to chuck it and get a new one?Wanting out of the contract treadmill though, you can get good plans with BYO phone for a paltry $11 per month here in AU. So I embraced all of the above and bought a used Nokia N9 for around 40% of the "equlvalent" iPhone. Should be getting it soon, a linux pocket rocket. We'll see, more later.
That's news... I didn't know you had both an iPhone 3GS and Android in your possession.
I had never seen "slide to unlock" on any other phone before I saw it on the iPhone. I generally find software patents distasteful, usually because the intellectual property being protected is frivolous and trivial. But given how astonished I was when I saw the slide-to-unlock feature in the 2007 iPhone demo, in all honesty, I don't think this is one of those frivolous patents. So I'll let a court decide if it's a legitimate and enforceable patent.