Author Topic: Why i hate iPod games  (Read 2202 times)

mine is fine

but water damage causes the lock button and volume up button to both increase volume and lock the screen at the same time
Water damage is at least explainable and somewhat probable.  But seriously, so many people with completely shattered screens?

Water damage is at least explainable and somewhat probable.  But seriously, so many people with completely shattered screens?

My dad bought me one with a broken screen for $50 so I'm good with it, it's hardly noticeable at times, and a screen is extremely cheap.

Water damage is at least explainable and somewhat probable.  But seriously, so many people with completely shattered screens?
The screens break easily, and people have a tendency to drop that which is valuable and fragile.

Bleh...
iPod Touch 4 all the way.



My Android-powered smartphone beats any iDevice any day.

Especially with a background like that.

Your background.

*brofist*

Resistive touchscreens work by having a bit of plastic hit the surface of the screen, and usually can't detect multitouch (however, can work with styluses and whatnot)

Capacitive touchscreens work by electricity.
The DS screen is fine :U
then why does your finger work on the ds

i'm just wondering, i'm really curious about how that works.

then why does your finger work on the ds

i'm just wondering, i'm really curious about how that works.

er no what I meant was this:
There's two layers to a resistive touchscreen, one of them is the part your finger/stylus hits, the other is the pad that detects the hit. When you hit the screen, you're pushing down on a piece of plastic that is hitting another at the bottom, but it's such a small gap that you don't really notice it.

Capacitive touchscreens work by detecting electricity through your fingers, which is why styluses don't work on them.



My Android-powered smartphone beats any iDevice any day.

Especially with a background like that.
I really don't care for that background. I have a tendency to make my own backgrounds for everything. Also, mine isn't a phone, but I still like it. It's easy to use, and I can't figure your Droid out by just looking at the home screen like I could an Apple device.
Not that I'm defending Apple, I usually don't care for their devices.

It's simple.
Icons in this order:
Phone - Internet - App Drawer - Notifications - Bookmarks - Task Manager

Flip Clock goes to Clock app and Flip Date goes to Calendar.
There are other pages, but the "dock" always stays there.

It's a lot easier to use than an iPod, and I've used an iPod for plenty long enough to say that and mean it.