Sounds like you need to change the API settings to TMO network. Quick google search should square you away.Okay. My HTC One finally came in. Its amazing so far (from a noob's perspective), but I have some big concerns.
1. I bought this phone unlocked then immediately switched to T-Mobile, but it has lots of ATT stockware on it, and essentially acts as a ATT phone. When I looked to update my phone it said "ATT is looking for software updates" when I'm officially on T-Mobile. This is also the same thing with the APP store Is there anyway to change all this, or am I screwed and need to return this for a tmobile one?
2. I am unable to send any pic or voice messages right now - only text. I signed up for unlimited data, so that can't be the problem. Is it because I'm using T-Mobile on an ATT branded phone?
Help brehs. I hope I dont have to return this since I already took it out of the box and removed the security label on the back and everything.
Sounds like you need to change the API settings to TMO network. Quick google search should square you away.
i actually dont mind no sd card slot, on the moto g, 16gb for 199? piff. but im more concerned about it's life span. its not like a nexus or anything. its still "moto"
Motorola's are renowned for their excellent build quality
not what I'm concerned about when I meant life span. nexus devices get around 2 years of support. will the moto g be the same?
you have an AT&T phone bro. ITs not a tmobile phone so everything will be AT&T. How does the app store act like an AT&T phone? use hangouts for smsOkay. My HTC One finally came in. Its amazing so far (from a noob's perspective), but I have some big concerns.
1. I bought this phone unlocked then immediately switched to T-Mobile, but it has lots of ATT stockware on it, and essentially acts as a ATT phone. When I looked to update my phone it said "ATT is looking for software updates" when I'm officially on T-Mobile. This is also the same thing with the APP store Is there anyway to change all this, or am I screwed and need to return this for a tmobile one?
2. I am unable to send any pic or voice messages right now - only text. I signed up for unlimited data, so that can't be the problem. Is it because I'm using T-Mobile on an ATT branded phone?
Help brehs. I hope I dont have to return this since I already took it out of the box and removed the security label on the back and everything.
isnt the phone running good with 4.4 why would you want new updates just for the ake of updates...apps are updated away from software updates. enjoy your devicenot what I'm concerned about when I meant life span. nexus devices get around 2 years of support. will the moto g be the same?
SAN FRANCISCO — Google said Wednesday it agreed to sell its Motorola business for almost $3 billion to China's Lenovo Group, a major strategy shift that gets the Internet search giant out of the business of manufacturing smartphones.
Lenovo is paying about $2.91 billion for Motorola: $660 million in cash, $750 million worth of Lenovo stock and $1.5 billion in the form of a three-year promissory note.
Lenovo gets the Motorola brand and current and future products, such as the Moto X smartphone. It also gets more than 2,000 patents and the Motorola trademark portfolio.
The sale price is a lot lower than the $12.5 billion that Google agreed to pay for Motorola in late 2011, in its largest acquisition ever. However, Google is keeping most of Motorola's patents and is providing Lenovo a license for this portfolio and other intellectual property.
Google was attracted by Motorola's huge patent portfolio, but it also let Motorola develop new smartphones, like the Moto X that went on sale last year.
Sales of the new Motorola phones have not been strong, though. And there are signs of a broader slowdown in the smartphone market, where intense competition is making it more difficult to make a profit from just manufacturing the hardware.
"Google got what they wanted and needed from Motorola – they got patents, engineering talent and mobile market insight," said Jack Gold, principal analyst at J.Gold Associates.
The Lenovo deal "gets them out of a business they don't have a chance of making any real money in, and gets them the ability to concentrate on real opportunities without the diversion of having to run a device manufacturing company," he added.
When Google makes its own smartphones it creates potential conflict with smartphone makers such as Samsung and HTC, which also use Google's Android operating system to run their devices, Gold added. Selling Motorola eases this tension, he says.
"I think that was the plan all along – Google would milk Motorola for a couple of years then sell it off," Gold said.
Google CEO Larry Page signaled that the company would be stepping back from the smartphone manufacturing business when the Lenovo deal closes.
"The smartphone market is super competitive, and to thrive it helps to be all-in when it comes to making mobile devices," he wrote in a company blog post on Wednesday.
Motorola will do better as part of Lenovo, which is already the largest PC maker in the world, he added.
The sale will let Google focus on the continued development of the Android operating system, "for the benefit of smartphone users everywhere," Page also said.
The deal does not signal a larger shift in Google's hardware efforts, which include Glass smart eyewear and the newly acquired Nest smart thermostat and smoke detector business, Page said.
"The dynamics and maturity of the wearable and home markets, for example, are very different from that of the mobile industry," Page added.
It’s About Time for Google’s Nexus Line to Go Away
The brand has outlived its usefulness thanks to Google Play edition hardware and other market changes.
By Jared Newman @OneJaredNewmanJan. 27, 201433 Comments
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Jared Newman / TIME.com
Google will terminate its “Nexus” brand of hardware some time next year.
http://techland.time.com/2014/01/27/its-about-time-for-googles-nexus-line-to-go-away/
