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Agora Android Phone Delayed By Glitches

An anonymous reader points out this report at News.com.au which says that "THE first Australian 'Google phone' set to go on sale within weeks has been delayed indefinitely, with the manufacturer Kogan forced to refund early buyers. In a statement released this afternoon, the company said the delay was 'due to future interoperability issues.'The Agora reached a very late stage of development, manufacturing had commenced and we were within days of shipping the product to customers,' company founder Ruslan Kogan said in a statement."

9 of 84 comments (clear)

  1. Real Story? by Idiomatick · · Score: 3, Insightful

    What's the real story? Nobody goes into production without atleast you know having 1 prototype... They could have tried it first... It like a pretty serious obvious issue if it causes indefinite delays...

  2. Re:New screen resolution a few days before release by Aladrin · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Why don't you believe it? I see 2 different ways this could happen:

    1) Someone finds a few apps that don't work at low res at all... Good apps like Google Earth or something.

    2) The programmers assure him that it can be handled right up until the end, when they are forced to admit they can't do it after all because they finally found the fatal flaw in the plan.

    As a programmer, I've had both things happen to me during a project. The first is just oversight and the second is usually due to some asinine quirk in the API that can't be worked around.

    --
    "If you make people think they're thinking, they'll love you; But if you really make them think, they'll hate you." - DM
  3. Re:Damn it! by Aladrin · · Score: 3, Informative

    phatsphere's correct. All the pre-orders are being refunded within the next 7 days, so none of us are out anything.

    I will admit that I was taking a big chance on a company I'd never heard of with a product that was a lot cheaper than I thought it should be. I doubt the next version of the phone will be so cheap, now.

    I really wish they'd just sold me the phone... Or given me the option.

    --
    "If you make people think they're thinking, they'll love you; But if you really make them think, they'll hate you." - DM
  4. how it happened by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    A couple of guys came from Google. Our CEO had been waiting for them by the door. someone says they went straight to a meeting room and were there for less than 20 minutes. no one saw them leave, but as soon as they were gone our CEO called a meeting. He looked very pale. he said: "I've halted the production on the Android phones." he said we were not to ship any of the products that have already rolled off. he told us to cancel all orders and refund all pre-orders. then he left the building with the marketing director.

    Our CEO has not been back since then. This must be big.

    1. Re:how it happened by morgan_greywolf · · Score: 5, Funny

      Our CEO has not been back since then. This must be big.

      Wow. I hate to break the news to you, but I think that it's likely that he got eaten by grue.

  5. Re:New screen resolution a few days before release by Oswald · · Score: 4, Funny

    I think you just said, "Of course this can happen -- because even though its a device manufacturer, they still have to deal with the fucked up world of software." Nice rejoinder.

  6. Why not release it? by Lord+Byron+II · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Release it and then just patch it repeatedly for months on end, fixing some things and breaking others in the process. Eventually, say the phone is past the end-of-life and instead of fixing anything, suggest that your customers buy your newest phone.

    This seems to work for most other businesses.

  7. Re:New screen resolution a few days before release by itsdapead · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The programmers assure him that it can be handled right up until the end, when they are forced to admit they can't do it after all because they finally found the fatal flaw in the plan.

    Or, alternatively, 3 days before shipping, the Pointy Haired Boss is finally forced to accept that the "political and economic realities" he's been trying to explain to the programmers for the last 3 months really are less important than those silly, geeky "laws of physics" which the programmers keep babbling about, and that all the unpaid overtime in the world won't produce a software patch that puts more pixels on the LCD.

    --
    In a survey of 100 programmers, 111111 thought that duck-typing was a good idea.
  8. Re:Damn it! by Evanisincontrol · · Score: 3, Informative

    It was $399/$299 (for the high-end/low-end models respectively) in Australian. That meant it was ~$250/$190 in U.S. dollars.