Well, the terminology in this discussion is a little inaccurate.  I'm
certainly a developer despite the fact that I use a conventional T-
Mobile G1.  That's the only reason I upgraded my T-Mobile phone to a
G1 in the first place, so I could program the darn thing.

On May 20, 9:50 am, Sena Gbeckor-Kove <[email protected]> wrote:
> Developers with ADP1's were able to get the code first. G1 updates are  
> handled by operators I believe. I'm not sure what happens to G1's once  
> they're off the reservation though I'm pretty sure you could root it  
> and put an HTC build on.
>
> S
>
> ---
>
> Sena Gbeckor-Kove
> CTO - imKon
>
> Mobile: +31 62 434 1290
> [email protected]    |    www.imkon.com
>
> imKon Ltd, 145-157 St John's St, EC1V 4PY London, UK
>
> On 20 May 2009, at 18:10, Keith Wiley wrote:
>
>
>
> > I have a standard G1 (not a dev phone) without a data plan.  So it has
> > cell coverage and wifi when I'm near wifi point.  How is cupcake
> > downloaded to the phone?  It is sent over the cell network despite the
> > fact that I don't have a data plan, or is it automatically detected
> > and downloaded over wifi when I connect to a network?  How would I
> > know that my "day in the rollout" came and the download didn't occur?
>
> > I'm a little worried because I was under the impression developers
> > would get it first...although I don't see how T-Mobile would really
> > *know* I was a developer, so I find that confusing.
>
> > Thoughts?
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