Posts tagged speaker

The T-Mobile G1 with Google phone new

T-Mobile Dash 3G specifications

  • Announced
    • Date
      • 18 Jun 2009
  • Network
    • Type
      • GSM Quad-band phone capable of global roaming (850/900/1800/1900 MHz)
        UMTS T-Mobile 3G (2100/1700 MHz)
    • Data
      • Help

        dummy popup info

        EDGE/UMTS/HSDPA 3.6 Mbit/s

    • 3G Capable
      • Yes
  • Size
    • Dimensions
      • Help

        dummy popup info

        4.59 x 2.42 x 0.47 inches (117 x 61 x 12 mm) Size Compare

    • Weight
      • 4.23 oz (120 g)
  • Battery
    • Type
      • Li – Ion, 1500 mAh
    • Talk
      • 8.5 hours (510 mins) of Talk time
    • Standby
      • 380 hours (16 days) of Stand-by time
  • Main Display
    • Resolution
      • 320 x 240 pixels
    • Type
      • 65 536 colors, TFT
    • Physical Size
      • 2.40 inches
  • Camera
    • Resolution
      • 2 megapixels Resolution
    • Features
      • Digital zoom
  • Multimedia
    • Video Playback
      • MPEG4
    • Music Player
      • MP3, AAC, WMA, WAV
  • Memory
    • Memory Slot
      • microSD/microSDHC
  • Software
    • Smartphone
      • Windows Mobile Standard 6.1
    • Processor
      • Qualcomm MSM 7225, 528 MHz
    • Memory
      • 192 MB RAM / 256 MB ROM
  • Input
    • Predictive Text Input
      • Yes
    • Keyboard
      • Full keyboard (QWERTY)
  • Connectivity
    • Internet
      • Internet Explorer Mobile
    • USB
      • miniUSB
    • WiFi
      • 802.11b/802.11g
    • Bluetooth
      • 2.0
  • Other Features
    • PhoneBook
      • Capacity depends on system memory; Ring ID, Picture ID, Multiple numbers per contact
    • PIM
      • Alarm, Calendar, To-Do / Tasks, Calculator, Notes
    • Voice
      • Dialing, Commands, Recording, Speaker Phone
    • JAVA
      • Yes
    • Email
      • IMAP/POP3/SMTP
    • GPS
      • GPS

The T-Mobile G1 with Google phone new

T-Mobile Dash 3G specifications

  • Announced
    • Date
      • 18 Jun 2009
  • Network
    • Type
      • GSM Quad-band phone capable of global roaming (850/900/1800/1900 MHz)
        UMTS T-Mobile 3G (2100/1700 MHz)
    • Data
      • Help

        dummy popup info

        EDGE/UMTS/HSDPA 3.6 Mbit/s

    • 3G Capable
      • Yes
  • Size
    • Dimensions
      • Help

        dummy popup info

        4.59 x 2.42 x 0.47 inches (117 x 61 x 12 mm) Size Compare

    • Weight
      • 4.23 oz (120 g)
  • Battery
    • Type
      • Li – Ion, 1500 mAh
    • Talk
      • 8.5 hours (510 mins) of Talk time
    • Standby
      • 380 hours (16 days) of Stand-by time
  • Main Display
    • Resolution
      • 320 x 240 pixels
    • Type
      • 65 536 colors, TFT
    • Physical Size
      • 2.40 inches
  • Camera
    • Resolution
      • 2 megapixels Resolution
    • Features
      • Digital zoom
  • Multimedia
    • Video Playback
      • MPEG4
    • Music Player
      • MP3, AAC, WMA, WAV
  • Memory
    • Memory Slot
      • microSD/microSDHC
  • Software
    • Smartphone
      • Windows Mobile Standard 6.1
    • Processor
      • Qualcomm MSM 7225, 528 MHz
    • Memory
      • 192 MB RAM / 256 MB ROM
  • Input
    • Predictive Text Input
      • Yes
    • Keyboard
      • Full keyboard (QWERTY)
  • Connectivity
    • Internet
      • Internet Explorer Mobile
    • USB
      • miniUSB
    • WiFi
      • 802.11b/802.11g
    • Bluetooth
      • 2.0
  • Other Features
    • PhoneBook
      • Capacity depends on system memory; Ring ID, Picture ID, Multiple numbers per contact
    • PIM
      • Alarm, Calendar, To-Do / Tasks, Calculator, Notes
    • Voice
      • Dialing, Commands, Recording, Speaker Phone
    • JAVA
      • Yes
    • Email
      • IMAP/POP3/SMTP
    • GPS
      • GPS

Review: HTC Droid Incredible

from Mobility Site by Dan H.

Review: HTC Droid Incredible: ”

The much hyped HTC Droid Incredible has finally landed. How well does it stack up to the “Incredible” branding? Read on to find out.

The Internals

The Droid Incredible has it all. It’s got a 1Ghz Snapdragon processor, 8GB of internal storage, 748MB ROM, a microSD slot that supports up to 32GB cards, and an 8MP camera with dual LED flash. It runs the latest build of Android, which is 2.1-update1 with HTC Sense and it’s backed by an amazing 3G network, also known as Verizon Wireless.

Design

The first thing you’ll notice about the Droid Incredible is the display. It’s a 3.7-inch capacitive touchscreen with the resolution of 480 x 800. It uses AMOLED technology, and thanks to that the display is crisp and vivid, and to put it in a few words: It’s one of my favorite displays on a mobile phone to date. The screen is really, really responsive, almost too sensitive at times. One thing to note is AMOLED screen aren’t readable in direct sunlight. It’s not a big deal, until you start using Google Maps Navigation in the car.

Below the screen, there’s four touch sensitive buttons: Home, Menu, Back, and Search. I’ve had issues with HTC touch buttons in the past (Droid Eris, Nexus One), but I’m happy to report that HTC has fixed the issue and the buttons are a joy to use. HTC removed the trackball in favor for the new optical trackpad which works great for selecting text and links on a webpage.

You’ll find a volume control and a microUSB port along the sides of the Droid Incredible. The microUSB port is slightly modified to fit their TV-out accessory, but if you already have a microUSB charger laying around, it will fit in just fine. A 3.5 mm headphone jack is also present, allowing you to plug in any pair of standard headphones.

Flipping to the back, you’ll notice the interesting topographic design. I wasn’t so crazy about the design until I held the phone in my hand. It looks like it adds bulk to the phone, but it’s really, really subtle and adds a uniqueness to the Incredible. From the practical side of things, it gives the speaker extra room to breathe when the phone is set down on it’s back. The 8MP camera and the dual LED flash is also on the back of the phone, and the flash is bright, and lit up a dark room really easily. There were hints of red on the Incredible, namely on the earpiece and the camera, but under the battery cover, it’s ALL red. HTC said they designed it off a sports car, and they wanted show off the guts of the Droid Incredible. I think it’s great and has a “wow” factor to it, but it’s all personal opinion. The battery is also red, and the microSD card slot is also present, capable of taking up to 32GB microSDHC cards.

I feel HTC really put time and effort into the design of the Incredible, and I really like it. It’s flashy with the red accents and the red internals, and it’s unique. Some people will love it, some won’t like it as much.

Software

The Droid Incredible runs Android 2.1 with HTC Sense. Sense is HTC’s custom UI/skin that runs on top of Android, and it brings some really great features. On a standard Android 2.1 device, you have five home screens to customize with widgets and shortcuts. With Sense, you have seven home screens to customize, and HTC added some of their custom widgets. As you can probably imagine, getting from screen one to screen seven is a pain. That’s why HTC added Leap to the latest rendition of Sense. Doing a pinch gesture on any of the home screens will bring you to a thumbnail view of all your home screens, making it very easy to jump from one screen to another.

HTC Sense is heavily integrated with different social networks. When you first set up the Droid Incredible, it allows you to log into Facebook, Twitter, and Flickr. Sense will pull in all the latest status updates/tweets from your social networks and puts them in the Friend Stream application. Friend Stream also allows you to update all your social networks at once, and also has a really nice widget to boot.

The Droid Incredible supports Gmail and Microsoft Exchange, as well as POP and IMAP email accounts. The Incredible has a dedicated Gmail application and the regular Mail app handles Exchange and POP/IMAP. Gmail is pushed, and the email experience is quite good. The Mail app has a nice widget that allows you to read emails right on your home screen, and it’s odd to me that they didn’t include a Gmail widget as well. As you would expect, browsing on the 3.7 inch display is amazing. Pages loaded relatively quickly, and it supports Flash Lite. No support for Hulu though.

Camera

The Droid Incredible has a 8 megapixel camera with a dual LED flash. The camera takes amazing photos, and it’s one of my favorite parts of the device. Pictures were crisp and gorgeous, the dual LED flash was a really welcome addition. The Droid Incredible’s camera replaced my need to bring my standalone camera on my recent trip to California. Videos shoot in 800 x 480 resolution, quality is ok, I kind of wished it could shoot in 720p res, but WVGA is just fine.

Battery Life

The Droid Incredible has a 1300mAh battery, the exact same one found on the HTC Droid Eris. Getting through a day was a little bit of a struggle. If you’re a heavy data user, you’re probably going to want a spare battery, or an extended battery.

Network Performance

This is my main concern with the Droid Incredible. Verizon has a great network, and coverage is always amazing here where I live in Philadelphia, occasionally dropping one bar or so. On the Droid Incredible, I never got more than 2 bars of 3G, and it went to 1x at least twice a day. I don’t know if this is a hardware related issue, or maybe it can be fixed via a software update, but it’s something that really bothers me.

Conclusion

In a couple words, it’s the best Android device out there. It’s not perfect, there are issues such as signal reception, but the clarity and the size of the display, the speed of phone, and the amazing camera, I can overlook the signal reception issue. Unless you really need a hardware keyboard, the Droid Incredible is the best Android device you can buy right now.


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HTC Magic G2 Google 2 A6161 Unlocked GSM Cell Phone International Version Android Mobile

Product By HTC
Lowest Price : Visit store to see price

Technical Details
  • GSM 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900, 3G HSDPA 900 / 2100
  • High-speed 3.5G network connection and Wi-Fi technology with seamless transition to open networks.
  • 3.2-inch touch-sensitive screen with HVGA (320 X 480 pixel) resolution
  • Easy viewing of PDF files and Microsoft Word and Excel documents via included PDF Viewer and Quickoffice applications
  • Microsoft Exchange ActiveSync with push email as well as calendar and contact synchronization

Product Description

The HTC Magic, powered by AndroidTM, is designed to turn heads with its chic looks, and command attention with its advanced list of capabilities. It provides the Google suite of services like Gmail, Search, YouTube and Maps geared up for use wherever your life leads you. Further enhanced with Outlook

BeHero 1.3.1

1.3.1 CHANGELOG:
- Shutdown working
- Speaker working
- Incoming/outgoing mic fixed

DOWNLOAD
MD5SUM: bde342ff6a14bb2d3b4db6b40bfa9fad
OBS! Needs full wipe, meaning wipe of following:
Wipe Data
Wipe Dalvik-cache
Wipe Ext

Boot time on this version can take up to 5-6 minutes due to all apks need to be loaded into the system, so be patient!

Nexus One vs. HTC Hero

I had an HTC Hero for quite some time now, then I bought the Nexus One. This post is a comparison between the two, but highly details the falls and pits of the Nexus One.

If you find this version of the post ugly, click here for a neat HTML version.

  • Phone & Charger Design
    • USB Port: Micro-USB. Got to carry my own cable around now :/ (Hero uses the common Mini-USB)
    • Soft amber light when charging unlike Hero’s bright amber LED. The charger does not have a light
    • Nexus’s trackball light is brighter than Hero’s. It has a blue-ish light
    • Hero’s activation buttons (as I call them): answer, home, menu & hang up/power are no longer buttons on Nexus but are touch-buttons. They also no longer activate the screen. The power button on the top does
    • The charger has a chin that takes space from either left or right, which is quite inconvenient since you have to put it on the edge of a power distributor
    • No place to hang a phone pendant! Where am I supposed to put my gold-plated 1 fils now? :(
  • Dock Station
    • Doesn’t transmit data. Must not connect to computer USB ports!
    • The phone transmits music to the dock via Bluetooth
    • Tacking the phone off the dock takes you to the unlocked home screen
  • Battery & Power
    • Charging Time: ~2:30 hours
    • Battery Statistics: Shows battery usage and which components use it mostly: Display, Cell standby, Android, Wallpaper, Phone idle, Voice calls and a few more
    • The default live wallpaper consumes the least power. Even less than still ones!
    • The screen shows the charging percentage

T-Mobile MyTouch Review

I love reviewing gadget but sometimes it is more fun to outsource especially when the reviewer is a gadget-loving-tech-savvy-MIT-bound-neighbor who had some time to play with the new T-Mobile MyTouch this summer. Meet guest reviewer Joe Lynch. Joe was the perfect person to review the new MyTouch since he uses the G1, aka Google Phone. Having just graduated from high school, he lends a teen’s perspective on the use of SmartPhones and explains why the new MyTouch is a great choice for anyone shopping for a new device.

The T-Mobile MyTouch is the second iteration of T-Mobile’s “Google Phone”, the first being the G1, which was reviewed by Tech Savvy Daddy last December. If you have ever find yourself swearing off any webmail client but GMail, forgoing more traditional scheduling implements like pen and paper for Google Calendar, relying on Google Maps to get you to and from daily events, or generally finding yourself slave to gLife, then this phone is the perfect candidate for you.

To be more accurate, Android is for you … but other than the G1 or the MyTouch, Android options in the US are slim. Apart from some nice user interface (UI) changes and much needed performance modifications, Android has not changed much from when Tech Savvy Daddy reviewed the G1. So enough about that old news…What about the phone?

What the MyTouch does right:

Right out of the box, the MyTouch gives the impression of being a sleek, snazzy phone that finally gives the iPhone a run for its money in the looks department. Unlike the G1, where I was constantly telling friends not to judge the phone by its cover, I am perfectly content to whip out the MyTouch because I know I won’t get the, “what is that blocky thing in your hand” look. Aesthetics are not the only improvement, however, as the MyTouch also sports a slew of under the hood improvements that will make it a well justified upgrade over the G1, or any other Smartphone for that matter.

First and foremost of these improvements is the battery. Anyone who owns a G1 quickly learns that 3G, WiFi, Bluetooth, GPS, and constantly syncing data comes at a price; for the first generation Google Phone that price was abysmal battery life. Simply put, the battery in the G1 (1150 mAh in case you were wondering) just couldn’t sustain all the electronic goodies within the phone. Luckily for consumers, the MyTouch comes with a better battery (1340 mAh!) which should technically yield ~15% more battery life. What is even better is that in reality the gains appear to be more around 25-30%. What does this all mean? This means that you can forget to charge your phone for a few days – hooray! Don’t forget for more than a few days though, or you will be carrying around a useless 4 ounce block of plastic for the rest of the day.

In addition to the battery upgrades, the MyTouch includes twice the memory of the G1. The memory hungry operating system that is Android (those background apps come at a cost!) has an extra 256 MB of ROM. This new improvement brings the phone’s total ROM to 512 MB and leaves the same 192 MB of RAM, although if you buy the phone outside the U.S. the phone comes with additional RAM. The increased ROM is very important because it means more applications can run at once and the phone can theoretically accept larger and larger OS upgrades. Although the last big G1 rumor concerning free upgraded batteries turned out to be false, there is a very substantiated (i.e. based on a tweet of course) claim that the G1 will not be able to receive future Android updates but the MyTouch will because of it’s greater memory capacity.

What the MyTouch does wrong:

Overall, the MyTouch did not have too many glaring flaws, or at least they did not reveal themselves during my testing period.

The only real problem I noticed very frequently was that the MyTouch does not have an actual keyboard. Even though the autocorrecting touch keyboard sort of works, it still only sort of works when compared to an actual keyboard like what the G1 and many Blackberrys have.

Some other minor perturbations existed, such as the need for a headphone adapter (what is so hard about having a 3.5mm jack, hmm??), and the accidental phone calls that occasionally occurred when hanging up the phone as a result of the touch screen failing to turn off quickly enough, but nothing too bad.

It also looks like U.S. MyTouch owners possibly won’t be getting a fancy new user interface (UI) that is debuting in Europe and Asia, but the U.S. cell phone market is fairly used to getting ‘worse than Europe/Asia” versions at this point.

For those wondering about all the other features this phone provides, here is a quick run down:

  • Camera – A 3 megapixel camera with autofocus; takes decent pictures, nothing to write home. The phone does feature one touch sharing through Picasa.
  • Outlook Email – Although I could not really test this as I have no outlook accounts, it was nice to see this commonly requested feature added.
  • Sherpa – A very cool program that allows you to search your nearby location for dining, entertainment, etc … Pretty cool and very “Google”.
  • Video Recording – Same as the Camera; decent, but nothing special. Upload to YouTube with a single touch.
  • Bluetooth Headphones – Seems to work fine with no discernable loss of audio quality.
  • Call Clarity – I had no problems whatsoever with call clarity. T-Mobile’s network let me down occasionally, but nothing to do with the phone.
  • Built in Speaker – Pretty standard for a phone, nothing better, nothing worse.
  • Touch screen – The capacitive touch screen is wonderful, but every phone has ‘em these days …
  • Applications – Although there are no apps that let you share contact info with a bump (or at least I don’t know of one), the Market does have pretty much anything you actually would need. And now that the MyTouch has more ROM, more apps can run at once!

Summary:

On paper the MyTouch outperforms the G1, all iPhone models before the 3Gs and almost any Blackberry. Even with just my limited experience with the latter two I would confidently say that this assessment is correct, as the MyTouch seemed to easily speed through my daily tasks. This apparent speed is most likely due to the vast advantage in ROM the MyTouch has over other phones, as well as its ability to multi-task (a well known flaw in the iPhone). This additional ROM keeps the “darn computer-whatchamacallit” moments at bay, which I always find to be a good thing. Android also continues to deliver a smooth user interface and OS, but we have come to expect nothing less than this from Google. This Phone has many positives, and a number of noticeable flaws, but overall I would say the MyTouch should certainly be a strong contender in any Smartphone decision, although I am slightly biased.

Come back later this week for a list of the top 10 Android Back to School applications. At the end of the week, the giveaway for the T-Mobile MyTouch will be live!

This review was written by Joe, a current MIT freshman. Joe spent his summer applying his math and science skills to design and build his family a gorgeous new deck featuring a tapered staircase and ipe boards that are held with a fancy but complicated fastening system. Joe probably would have finished his deck much sooner had he not spent lots of time patiently answering all of Little Miss Techie and Captain Computer’s questions as they peered over the fence at the construction.

Joe received a gift certificate from me for his time as a product tester and for writing this review. No additional compensation was received for writing this review. The MyTouch was provided by T-Mobile for review purposes and has been returned per our agreement.

Android Developer Lab, California

I attended Android Developer lab yesterday. Wanted to share the experience with all of you.

First the background

I try to attend a local coding group where a gang of around 20 or so developers meet on a weekly basis huddling with their laptops to review code, applications and discuss overall Android state of art. It is from this group that I got the wind of Android Developer Labs: http://sites.google.com/site/androiddevlabs/faq

I applied few weeks back. However, very few from my group were getting the acceptance invitation. Mine did not come until yesterday morning. I guess, they ran out of all the good candidates by then J

Anyway, I was finally in!

The Place

The event was happening in a VERY large conference room at Google complex. I want to say there were upwards of 300 attendees. Everyone is supposed to show up with their Laptops + Android SDK + Eclipse + Sample code. I being myself, arrived 5 minutes late. The conference room was WALL to WALL full with attendees and I could find a sitting place only at the last row. Well, I would not take that for this kind of event. Walked right past all 30 rows and took up a position at the very FRONT row right in front of the speaker. I was in a good neighborhood! The guy sitting next to me has Remote Desktop Application for Android market which he is selling for $20. Nice!

Key Things covered

The session started around 2 p.m. The person presenting was from the Google Developer relationship team and his job is to evangelize to developers like us. They are holding similar sessions across the country. He first focused on letting us know what were the features in the latest SDK (Android 2.0). I will send you the presentation later on or you can get it on your own from the Web. But here are my key takeaways:

  • As of end of 2009, Android was in 48 countries with 59 carriers and 20 devices
  • They are truly trying to make it an OPEN source, OPEN platform which can target MANY devices as opposed to ONE (I guess you all know which the CHOSEN ONE is!)
  • They want to differentiate by making Apps super–simple to publish. You can submit and upload your app in 5 minutes or less and that’s it. No Hurdles, No Reviews!
  • If that is scary, they say it has always been the Google Way. Let the Community review process shake out the undesirable elements and not Google central committee.
  • Finally, they want devices and applications which will cater to four key aspects: EYES, EARS, TOUCH and LOCATION.

The Surprise

After giving us an overview of the SDK, the presenter wanted us to open our laptops and do a lab solution. He suggested that we use some test devices that they will provide. Then he looked at us and said: “Tell you what! We will give you all a Droid Phone each!” The room burst into thundering applause. Within 5 minutes, I had my own Droid phone. It took me minutes to set the battery, hook up to my laptop via USB and the phone turned on. I had to press 1 to activate my phone. Here came another surprise. The phone was activated with 1 month free Voice and Data from Verizon and a $120 discount from a yearly service if I sign a contract within 30 days. Santa Claus has truly come to town!

Getting my own apps loaded

I have been developing Android applications, but had to remain satisfied with the emulator running on my laptop. I was ready to deploy the apps on the actual device and see it going. It took some hurdle to get the USB driver configured and my laptop to recognize the phone. Within next 30 minutes I got my starter Apps running on the phone! Developing on Eclipse, downloading via USB, running on actual device! I was in heaven. Almost!

I forgot to mention, during this wait time, I was able to connect with Gmail, suck all my contacts and mail down, take a picture of my worthy neighbor, email him and also check out Facebook.

The Assignment

Beyond the euphoria, the serious business of application development continued. Google wanted us to work on a Bluetooth based chat application. We had to write a simple piece of code to control bluetooth, locate other bluetooth devices that are within communication range, request communication with a remote device, and listening for incoming requests

The App Show

Next developers were asked to walk up to the podium and show everyone any apps they can share. Four or five walked up to the podium and presented. Since there was no phone projection, people had to be happy with the desktop screen dumps and webpages. Most apps shown were in the consumer category. One developer from our meetup group camp showed her coin collection app. One guy showed a 3D gaming engine. One gentleman showed an Android tablet.


Thoughts and Conclusions

2010 will be an interesting year to watch for mobile application development!

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Sony Ericsson XPERIA X10 -$220
Sony Ericsson Jalou D&G Edition $200
Sony Ericsson XPERIA X2 $200
Sony Ericsson Jalou -$195
Sony Ericsson Satio –$190
Sony Ericsson Idou$180
Sony Ericsson C510 $185
Sony Ericsson P1 $125
Sony Ericsson W995 -$190
Sony Ericsson C905 $145
Sony Ericsson XPERIA X1 $175

Nokia:
Nokia N900 $220
Nokia X6 $210
Nokia Surge -$190
Nokia N98 $190
Nokia N85 $190
Nokia N96 16GB $175
Nokia E90 $150
Nokia N97 mini $200
Nokia N97 $195
Nokia N79 $175
Nokia E72 $190
Nokia E71 $160
Nokia E75 $185
Nokia 5530 XpressMusic $190
Nokia 5800 XPress Music- $185
Nokia 5800 Navigation Edition $190

Sony Ericsson Walkman Players:
Sony Ericsson 32GB X Series Walkman MP3 Player $160
Sony Ericsson 16GB X Series Walkman MP3 Player $120
Sony Ericsson 16GB S Series Walkman Video MP3 Player $100
Sony Ericsson 8GB S Series Walkman Video MP3 Player $96

CYBER-SHOT DIGITAL CAMERAS
Sony a230 DSLR Camera and Two Lenses $480
Sony a330 DSLR Camera and Lenses $ 510
Sony a380 DSLR Camera and Two Lenses $560
Cyber-shot

Android Critique

I like to think that I can evaluate and judge a product based on its merits, but there are some companies that elicit emotional responses from me. Apple is one. Contrary to common emotional responses, I get repulsed by Apple products, just because it is Apple. I used to be neutral with them… I liked the iPod, but was never very interested in anything else they did. With their handling of the iPhone (and the App Store specifically), I have come to mistrust them, and now I will actively avoid their products when possible.

Google also brings up emotional feelings for me, but quite the opposite. I have a soft spot for Google for a few reasons. They are strong supporters of open source, both by providing a lot of open source projects (Android, Chrome, Chrome OS, some neat Java libraries… to name a few), but also by providing infrastructure (google code). Most of their products are free, which is hard to dislike. Not only are they free, they tend to be pretty good. I have never had problems with their search. GMail has always been so simple and easy to use that I would never think of switching (especially after seeing people struggle with Yahoo Mail, which seems so cluttered and complicated by contrast). Android blew me away as my first smart phone (with the G1).

With the emotional responses, it’s a bit hard to judge whether I like a product from its merits, or it is just my fanboyism that is blinding me to the issues. I want to take a moment to critique Android in this light. I still love the platform, but it would be foolish to claim there are no issues. I honestly believe that overall it is a step up from the iPhone, but I have never had extended time with the iPhone to really have an honestly unbiased opinion there.

First, the good things. Given the right hardware, it can be a snappy OS. The G1 can be sluggish, but my new Droid has proven a significant speed boost. Widgets represent a huge advantage over the bland icon-only iPhone interface. I like having the calendar straight there on my desktop, no touching to see what I have coming up. The ability for an application to always display pertinent information is pretty cool.

Multithreading and background processes can be a pain to implement, but it is a neat feature that Android has over the iPhone. I can have applications actively retrieving useful information, or interacting with each other, or switch between processes while long running tasks are executing. It makes my phone experience much more in line with my desktop computer experience.

The updates are constantly making the Android experience better. Before I switched to the Droid, I had navigation on my G1, something that was nowhere in sight when I first got it. Widgets didn’t really exist, and I can now do things such as search with voice commands. The Market (equivalent to the Apple App Store) has slowly evolved with the platform. It only supported free apps initially, but now has both paid and free. Screenshots were added recently, along with the ability to view the top free and paid apps separately. I expect the Market experience only to improve with time.

Now to move on to some bad things. I really like the Droid hardware, but one thing I miss from the G1 are a dedicated number row on the physical keyboard. It is really annoying to have to press alt to type a number. I also miss a dedicated call/answer and hangup button. Those 2 missing features of the hardware are offset by the much better screen and the increased processing and storage power. However, I really miss them.

As for Android itself, the biggest issue is probably caused by the choice of Java as the development language. Applications tend to pause every now and then, including the standard apps like the browser. It could be too many background processes running, but it is very reminiscent of garbage collection pauses which are common in Java. I hope this will be improved with ever better hardware along with improvements in the Dalvik VM that Android uses.

My G1 didn’t seem to lock up that often, but my Droid has already locked up a few times, and experienced other glitches that you might not be used to happening in a phone. The oddest recently happened where I could hear just fine during a call, but only when the speaker was on. Switch to non-speaker mode and I couldn’t hear a word. Rebooting the phone fixed it. I expect software to fail like this now and then, but it is not good to have my phone crash when I could be receiving an important call, or otherwise experience weird glitches while speaking with someone. I expect updates to resolve these kinds of issues, but it is unfortunate to see any of such catastrophic failures. Probably the worst failure I have had was on my G1, when I had lost reception for about a day without realizing it. The phone just stopped receiving phone calls until I rebooted.

There are a lot of features that are very useful, but very hard to discover. For example, long press on the home button will bring up a dialog that will let you run recent applications. This is extremely useful when switching between a couple applications. Similarly, I only recently learned how to cut and paste with keyboard shortcuts instead of clunky menu controls. I had to find those by looking online. Perhaps it isn’t fair to blame the platform for hard to discover features, but it might be nice if the platform gave easy to use, short tutorials the first time you do certain key tasks.

The Market still needs a lot of work. What is the one thing Google should get right in its mobile platform? Search! Searching in the Market doesn’t work very well. I have run keywords looking for specific applications, only to get back no results, even though the keywords should have worked. For example, “snogg” will not find the “DoggCatcher” application, even though the developers are “SnoggDoggler.” There are also very minimal ways to find applications. You can search, you can browse various categories, and you can look at the top paid, top free, or “just in” of a particular category. Unfortunately “top” has no clear meaning. Under the top free list of all games, PapiJump is below WordSearch Unlimited Free. Except, WordSearch has less downloads (50k – 250k vs. PapiJump’s over 250k), and a lower rating (4 stars vs. 4.5 stars). It would be nice to sort the lists in various ways, such as by overall vote score, number of downloads, whatever the current “top” algorithm is, alphabetically, etc.

Overall I am very happy with the platform, but some of the issues I have run into are probably non-starters for some people. It has clearly gotten better since I first started with my G1, so I have no doubts that the platform will only improve with time, and eventually beat out Apple as the #1 smart phone.