I thought "Droid" was one of the US carriers brands. I'd guess they're selling, and probably renaming, phones from various manufacturers to make them seem more coherent.
Motorola makes a phone called the Droid. However, they don't own the name Droid, Lucasfilm does (Motorola licensed it.)
If you look at pages for the Droid Incredible, you'll see they also licensed the name:
'DROID is a trademark of Lucasfilm Ltd. and its related companies. Used under license.'
My guess is that Motorola didn't get any sort of exclusivity from Lucasfilm, so other companies are free to call their phones Droid as well if they pay Lucasfilm for a license - and piggyback on Motorola's marketing spend.
Wikipedia says that the phone is called the Motorola Milestone in Europe, but called the Motorola Droid in the US because Verizon, who have exclusive US distribution rights on the phone, has licensed the name from Lucasfilm.
It's not confusing if you know that, in the US, the average person doesn't think about buying a Motorola or HTC. They are buying their phone from Verizon, so it's up to Verizon to market them. That's why Verizon licensed the "Droid" TM.
HTC wouldn't be able to come out with a Droid 2 because that's Verizon's decision. The Droid 2 is coming out later this year, made by Motorola because that's the way Verizon wants it.
Actually, Verizon did. Which is why their top mobile lines (Eris, Incredible, initial Droid) are all called Droid, the Droid is called Milestone in Europe.
Droid is a Lucasfilm brand licensed by Verizon. Verizon uses that brand on its top of the line Android mobiles: Droid Eris (HTC Hero), Droid/Motorola Droid (Motorola Milestone) and Droid Incredible (HTC Incredible).
This means the "Droid" name is solely for the US under verizon, and those phones are called something else out of the US or when released unlocked or by Sprint.
And yes, it's incredibly misleading (and annoying as the Droid and the Droid Incredible have completely different UIs for instance as the Incredible uses HTC's Sense UI whereas the Droid ran a crippled stock Android system)
It's always better to do a hard reset before selling your Android phone anyway.
Edit:
Ops! Missed this part: "... and even a full reset to factory settings failed to eviscerate the indiscreet imagery."
I believe that these screenshots are cached to appear as previews for bookmarked sites. But a full reset should wipe everything. If this is not the case, it could indeed be an issue.
A reset doesn't clear them because they're stored on the SD card, which a factory reset very specifically does not touch. Wipe the SD card and you've nuked a user's photos and any info stored by applications.
Given a factory wipe is a common troubleshooting step, it's kind of obvious why it would leave the SD card alone.
Frankly, this whole thing strikes me as incredibly overblown.
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[ 3.8 ms ] story [ 47.3 ms ] threadIf you look at pages for the Droid Incredible, you'll see they also licensed the name: 'DROID is a trademark of Lucasfilm Ltd. and its related companies. Used under license.'
My guess is that Motorola didn't get any sort of exclusivity from Lucasfilm, so other companies are free to call their phones Droid as well if they pay Lucasfilm for a license - and piggyback on Motorola's marketing spend.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Motorola_droid
It also says that the HTC/Droid Incredible is on Verizon too.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Droid_Incredible
And the HTC Hero on Verzion is called the Droid Eris
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HTC_Droid_Eris
Which is exactly what happened: the Droid 2 is the Droid Incredible, by HTC.
HTC wouldn't be able to come out with a Droid 2 because that's Verizon's decision. The Droid 2 is coming out later this year, made by Motorola because that's the way Verizon wants it.
Actually, Verizon did. Which is why their top mobile lines (Eris, Incredible, initial Droid) are all called Droid, the Droid is called Milestone in Europe.
This means the "Droid" name is solely for the US under verizon, and those phones are called something else out of the US or when released unlocked or by Sprint.
And yes, it's incredibly misleading (and annoying as the Droid and the Droid Incredible have completely different UIs for instance as the Incredible uses HTC's Sense UI whereas the Droid ran a crippled stock Android system)
Edit: Ops! Missed this part: "... and even a full reset to factory settings failed to eviscerate the indiscreet imagery."
I believe that these screenshots are cached to appear as previews for bookmarked sites. But a full reset should wipe everything. If this is not the case, it could indeed be an issue.
* A factory reset has no reason to clean up the SD card
* You'll more than likely keep or wipe the SD card before sale
* Pictures on the SD card should be easy for users to find
Conclusion: non-story.
Given a factory wipe is a common troubleshooting step, it's kind of obvious why it would leave the SD card alone.
Frankly, this whole thing strikes me as incredibly overblown.
Edit: OK, after re-reading it, it seems that it's "bookmarking gadget", I guess its function is to show some preview of the bookmarked pages.