Tom,
a friend of mine who works in a phone store told me it happens quite
regularly. sometimes customers complain that their phone has become very
slow over the course of time and wonder if anything can be done. a new fresh
OS will be reintalled then, similar to a defragmentation or reinstall on a
regular computer.
this goes for europe (holland), not sure about japan.
hope this helps,
Richard
PS any off list email svp to Richard.Tee __atsign___infonomics.nl
>
> ------------------------------
>
> From: Tom Hume <tom@futureplatforms.com>
> Subject: Re: Two problems
> Date: Tue, 18 Nov 2003 22:58:40 +0000
>
> Out of interest, how often does this happen? I've had to do it once,
> but I can't recall knowing anyone else (who doesn't work in mobile
> telecomms) who has. Does this fit with other people's experience? Is it
> different in Japan? Do the extensive testing procedures that operators
> put handsets through help avoid nasties here?
>
> On 18 Nov 2003, at 13:39, John Whelan wrote:
>
> > A. Consumers in Europe sometimes need to upgrade the OS on a handset
> > (for
> > various reasons - usually unstable OS delivered by handset
> > manufacturer!).
> > In doing so normally they lose any content items (ringtones, logos,
> > java
> > apps) that they have purchased previously and stored on the phone.
> ---
> Future Platforms Ltd
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> e: tom@futureplatforms.com
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>
>
> ------------------------------
>
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Received on Wed Nov 19 18:34:04 2003