[
This is why I think you don't understand the reality of what an open source OS is as applied to the realities of making it work on a non-standardized phone. This is the whole argument about how Android is becoming fragmented and will go nowhere. It's what is making me wonder how we'll be able to see and implement (if ever) a next evolution of the OS.
Let's say HTC now develops its own flavor of Android, so does Motorola and so will Dell because Android itself may not handle common tasks in a mostly standardized solution. The result? An application developer must write the same application three times to deal with each fork of Android. As such, it's too much effort, too many bugs to handle, too little money to make. I've read from several developers a desire not to develop for Android much longer because they are realizing the unfortunate reality and lack of revenue stream. And what happens when the OS is updated? What about all those layers on top of the OS? How about the apps that depend upon them?
@ BayouFlyFisher - LOL but you're still wrong. hehe.
For those of you that care (and still don't understand) as I don't care to respond further here, the problem is simple. In the phone log, incoming and outgoing calls are referred to as "Yesterday" and "2 days Ago", etc. As today is Friday, most of you would think yesterday = "Thursday" and 2 days ago = "Wednesday." It does but not on Android. Yesterday means "some time in the past 24-48 hours which could be Wednesday or Thursday" and 2 days ago means "some time in the past 48-72 hours which could be Tuesday or Wednesday." If you're confused, then obviously you don't user terms like "yesterday" the way Android does so many of us think it should be corrected.
My disappointment is echoed in my response to pudah and also by others. I'm not sure what the Android OS is becoming. The 2.1 "update" opened up my eyes to the fragmentation issue. It makes me wonder whether anyone can fix bugs in android centrally. For example, how do you turn off that awful lock screen once and for all? Let's assume that Google wants to include another preference in the OS. How long will it be and how much effort will it take until that important preference can become a part of each "Android" phone? Apparently Motorola must do its part separately from HTC, etc. I'm beginning to have more faith in the development of ROMs by private people here than I am believing that Motorola is going to spend time and money to create a Droid 2.5 update... or even a 2.2 that makes small fixes in bugs.
PS - we are already seeing the beginnings of this issue. Supposedly "Android 2" applications that will work on the Nexus One but not on the Droid and vice versa. Soon we may need to have a "Droid Market" and a "Nexus One Market" etc...