The G1 vs. the iPhone
Google, T-Mobile and friends vs. Apple While the wireless market has been inundated with iPhone-like smartphones over the past year, T-Mobile's latest smartphone has generated a significant amount of buzz because it will be the first to use Google's open-source Android mobile platform as its operating system. As Google has conceived it, Android is supposed to help break down the so-called "walled garden" on the mobile Web by letting developers create open-source third-party applications, and by giving users the option of switching networks while keeping their devices. In this slideshow, we'll evaluate both the iPhone and the new G1 in terms of cost, network quality, enterprise features and more.
Latest News
- South Africa disappointed it has to share with Australia
- SKA to be jointly hosted by Australia, New Zealand and South Africa
- Cisco takes its lumps, keeps developing video meeting tools
- Wall Street Beat: After Facebook fiasco, don't write off tech IPOs
- FCC ruling on 800MHz band a boon for Sprint
- Oracle NetBeans 7.2 supports the latest PHP, C++
- Quickbooks Online outage leaves some customers in sour mood
- Mayor of New Jersey town arrested on hacking and conspiracy charges
- Coding contest shows how big data can improve health care
- Untethered jailbreak for iOS 5.1.1 available for download
- Unthethered jailbreak for iOS 5.1.1 available for download
- CSIRO develops hands-free technology for mining repairs
- Gear and gadgets at CeBIT 2012, Sydney
- Japan robot lab readies second prototype for work at crippled nuclear reactor
- Foxtel finalises Austar takeover

