So, in other words, they're enforcing the policies that they've always had in place because the policies are being abused, after years of being lax about them? It seems like a perfectly legitimate thing to do, don't you think?
I was one of these people with a RAZR and T-MobileWeb service who'd hacked the Java Web sessions files to allow access to Opera Mini, but I knew all along (especially after explicitly asking customer support about it) that this was not the intended usage of the T-MobileWeb service. So now I have a Blackberry Pearl, pay the $20 (still a savings over Cingular or Verizon) and happily use many more mobile apps than I ever could on the RAZR.
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Creon @ Mar 2nd 2007 5:13PM
So, in other words, they're enforcing the policies that they've always had in place because the policies are being abused, after years of being lax about them? It seems like a perfectly legitimate thing to do, don't you think?
I was one of these people with a RAZR and T-MobileWeb service who'd hacked the Java Web sessions files to allow access to Opera Mini, but I knew all along (especially after explicitly asking customer support about it) that this was not the intended usage of the T-MobileWeb service. So now I have a Blackberry Pearl, pay the $20 (still a savings over Cingular or Verizon) and happily use many more mobile apps than I ever could on the RAZR.