it was a good deal plus i wanted to get one for emma but she reads all hat i put on here so i just kept saying what i did, its 2 years this monh since she landed here so a nice present this was going to be, plus Peter if Emma is happy then i am too, just have to wait for the told you so from the rest of the gang coming along soon,![]()
Have to be honest Steve, you got a darn good deal. Well done.
I'm paying £32 per month for the same.
I've told Carina no iPhone 5 forget it. And I mean it.
She gave me a hug and a sweet smile (you know the sort) said how about iPad 4 and I said..........................
............... maybe
Just in case Emma is reading
Yes, good idea. We bought a back cover too.
The first iphone my wife had was dropped on the road and the front glass cracked. Still worked fine but ..................
Cost me £150 for a replacement phone at the Apple store MK.
Mind you, it had a new battery and a 12 month warranty. But...................![]()
My concern wd the iphone is battery life..those wd an iphone will be aware that you cant change the battery..its built in.
If the main use is going to be mainly non internet use then great, no heavy recharging but, if like me, im forever recharging I would be pretty miffed off having to buy another phone after less than a year's use...rather than just another battery for my Samsung.
I couldn,t tell you why, but not something I have come across with the iPhone.
"Smartphones running Google's Android software have been hijacked by an illegal botnet, according to a Microsoft researcher.
Botnets are large illegal networks of infected machines - usually desktop or laptop computers - typically used to send out masses of spam email.
Researcher Terry Zink said there was evidence of spam being sent from Yahoo mail servers by Android devices.
Microsoft's own platform, Windows Phone, is a key competitor to Android.
The Google platform has suffered from several high-profile issues with malware affected apps in recent months.
The official store - Google Play - has had issues with fake apps, often pirated free versions of popular paid products like Angry Birds Space or Fruit Ninja.
This latest discovery has been seen as a change of direction for attackers.
"We've all heard the rumours," Mr Zink wrote in a blog post.
"But this is the first time I have seen it - a spammer has control of a botnet that lives on Android devices.
"These devices login to the user's Yahoo Mail account and send spam." "
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-18720565
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