View Single Post
  #6 (permalink)  
Old 03-07-2008, 01:49 AM
DHarvey's Avatar
DHarvey
VIP Member
Offline
 
Join Date: Sep 2007
Posts: 1,296
Reputation: 6224
DHarvey is a trusted member of the communityDHarvey is a trusted member of the communityDHarvey is a trusted member of the communityDHarvey is a trusted member of the communityDHarvey is a trusted member of the communityDHarvey is a trusted member of the communityDHarvey is a trusted member of the communityDHarvey is a trusted member of the communityDHarvey is a trusted member of the communityDHarvey is a trusted member of the communityDHarvey is a trusted member of the community
Mentioned: 0 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Re: Update for Telenav on Touch

Quote:
Originally Posted by savior02 View Post
yep i know what u mean i have all these old folders in my device/programs folder of old programs that i have unistalled and i would love to delete them manually but i heard it will slow the cache down because of the reg..........as far as the sig im glad u liked it i used to send it to everyone they also got a kick out of it..i doubt Hesse will go through with this for marketing he's super tight with money these days thanks to Nextel as i learned from this article:

Latest financials confirm it: Sprint and Nextel probably shouldn't have merged
Filed under: Sprint, Misc
Well, it looks like the aggressively priced unlimited action really didn't come a moment too soon. We're no economists here, but it doesn't take rocket science, a Ph.D., collegiate level maths, or even a fancy calculator to crunch the cold, hard numbers coming out of Sprint Nextel's fourth quarter earnings call. For starters, the number three carrier in the US reported a net loss of nearly $29.5 billion, which -- get this -- is more than the combined value of its outstanding stock. Let us reiterate for emphasis and drama value: Sprint lost more money in the fourth quarter of 2007 than the company is worth. Wow. If it's any consolation, the staggering figure is largely due to a $29.7 billion write-down of Nextel's value, which as the Wall Street Journal lays out, makes the 2005 merger officially a "Deal From Hell." With postpaid subscribers continuing to migrate to other carriers, there's no telling how to stop the hemorrhaging -- especially if the fresh $99 unlimited plan doesn't end up doing the trick -- but something tells us the move to Kansas isn't going to magically patch it all up.
Did some reading... Looks like either T-Mobile or Google will be buying Sprint. I read that at kcstar.com but I don't know how soon, if ever, this is going to happen. I think that Sprint customers are just going to end up up s**t's creek without a paddle in a few years. Look's like I'll be switching to Verizon or over to T-Mobile and get my hands on a Touch Dual.
__________________