http://cnettv.cnet.com/motorola-droi...-50079391.html
The "tie breaker" assessment was pretty lame IMHO, but an interesting view.
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http://cnettv.cnet.com/motorola-droi...-50079391.html
The "tie breaker" assessment was pretty lame IMHO, but an interesting view.
LOL - Yeah, why would anyone care about round 5... I mean, you don't really care if your phone makes a call or not, right? :o
But I agree.. The iphone makes a better iPod than the Droid. ;)
I test drove a Droid today. IMHO, it blows away the iPhone. I'm surprised most reviews placed them as so competitive to each other. They're not, the Droid GPS is MUCH better, the data connection much faster, the "tilt" detection feature much better calibrated, the camera was infinitely better (approaching real camera quality and usefulness with the flash), the screen resolution was incredible. All around, a better product.
I rather liked the tactile keyboard, and thought it felt very solid. The touch keyboard was easily as good as iPhones if you prefer.
And it's not on AT&T.
I'm extremely happy with my Droid. It's works far better than I could have ever hoped for. The GPS is great, especially when there is a Google street view available. As you approach your destination it brings up street view with 360 rotation to show you what to look for. I was surprised by this when I tried it the first time and it brought up our Credit Union branch as I arrived at work in the morning.
With that said.. if rumors are true with iPhone 4th gen being on Verizon this summer - it's going to make the decision making alot harder in the future.
I'm hoping we get Android 2.1 in the next couple of weeks so I can get the 5 home page screens by default.
I love my G1 android, i am trying to worm my way into a nexus1.
Rumor has it one of the announcements from Apple this Wednesday is that the iPhone exclusivity with AT&T will be coming to an end. I hope this is true.
I have had no problems with my G1 and love it to death, but it sounds like the Droid is a definite upgrade. I've always been pleased as pie with T-Mobile, but Kidd has had the worst luck with their service on his Blackberry. I think he would be very happy if we switched to Verizon, and I would be ok with getting a new Droid.
T-Mobile sucks eggs:egg:
No, your Blackberry on T-Mobile sucks. My phone, and other phones before it, have been flawless. The Blackberry must just have some issue capturing T-Mobile's signal. While that is indeed an issue, I don't think it's reflective of the quality of T-Mobile.
When our contract is up, we can go to Verizon if you wish, but I will NEVER sign on with AT&T.
Nexus 1
http://www.google.com/phone
t-mobile or Verizon.
I understand the concept of being addicted to a real hardware keyboard, I guess. But every time I pick up one of these phones (G1, Droid, or pretty much any other out there) the keyboards *suck hard*. I mean really bad. You have to use a corner of your finger to engage some of the buttons on these things, and to access other buttons you're pressing function or color or something.
You guys must all be gnomes with pinkies of steel. Gnomes who are happy with an inferior app store. I'm glad you're happy though... :)
I actually have pretty giant hands, and I have no problem using the keyboard with my thumbs. When I try to use the on-screen, I ALWAYS hit the wrong button with my monster fingertips and it is uber-frustrating.
Inferior app store? You mean a store with every app you could ever want that is almost always free?
I am absolutely in love with my Droid.
At first I thought that the keyboard was horrible and that I would always use the on-screen keyboard since that was what I was used to... I have since changed my mind and love love love the thing. After a month of using the keyboard I can't imagine not having it.
Every app that I can dream of is available and free. Ya, I am sure that the iTunes app store has some extra stuff that the android market doesn't, but heck, if I'm not missing it then I guess I didn't need it junking up my phone in the first place.
I wouldn't change a thing and am a darn happy camper.
I'm of the same thought mode - I'd like to know what the iPhone app store has that is so much better and more abundant than the Android app store. Anything I can possibly think of, and MUCH more - is all there for free. I can't keep up with all the new applications being released on there. I haven't paid for a single app yet - although I may pay for premium Remember the milk so I have access to their app. I haven't decided on that yet.
Another app I haven't bought but tried a free usage of is "locate". Very cool app where you can set your profiles on the phone to switch depending on where you are at. IE - When you arrive at work, it can automatically switch you to 'silent' mode. If you arrive home, it can switch wallpaper, appearance, ringtones, etc. You can set a profile for anyplace you want and when the GPS detects you arrive there - it loads up that profile. Pretty darn cool.
Although I have no problem with the hardware keyboard, and I do still use it occasionally - I'm finding myself now using the touch keypad more and more as I've gotten comfortable with the suggest / spelling feature of words using the touch pad.
The best aspect for me, by far, is all the integration that is very well done with Google applicaitons. Gmail is about perfect, GPS-Maps/street view is superb, Voice is extremely cool, Reader works very well, and I'm finding listen is really cool for podcasting purposes - although I'm not a 'huge' podcast listener.
We had this discussion over at iRacing about our favorite phone apps just the last day or two.
Apps I use alot are:
Dolphin web browser (Has multi touch enabled)
Swift (Twitter)
Newsrob (Google Reader)
Remember the Milk (Although I need to go premium, trial up)
Other apps I find very cool include:
eBuddy (IM client)
Handcent for chat
Evernote
Layar Browser
Listen (Google app for podcasts and such)
Tip Calc
USA Today
The Weather Channel
Barcode Scanner
Goggles (Google image searcher)
Flixter
NFL Super fan DirecTV app (not now of course)
Shazam
Last.fm
Certainly all the best app developers are flooding to the Android store to give their apps away for free. (Sarcasm)
Download iTunes and hop on there some time. For a big racing fan you have dozens of excellent choices.
Whatever the Droid store has, the iTunes store has more of. You have 5 weather apps, the iPhone has 50. It's not an exaggeration. Plus movies, music, television, and seamless podcast syncing, without comment spam.
I'm carrying over 4 Gigs of apps on my phone at the moment, with many, many more that I swap in and out as the mood strikes me. I have no doubt that the Droid store is getting better, but you can hardly expect it to match the store that's been around longer and has a larger developer support base.
Am I doing it wrong? I have 30 page me-too App overload with my iPhone. I want a weather app, I don't want to pay for it, because there's 31 pages of them. But I can't sort through them all. I want a decent free weather app that doesn't spam me or just suck. I'm using an obsolete WeatherBug app from 4 OS upgrades ago to check my weather - because the default iPhone version doesn't give enough detail, and all the updated free "lite" versions spam me with annoying banner ads.
I have 5 weather apps on my iPhone. The default one from Apple, Weatherbug Elite, Accuweather, The Weather Channel, and "Hot Weather" (a pinup app, lol.)
If you don't want to pay and/or are irritated with ads, there are other choices for you. There are 30+ pages of choices. I'm afraid I can't help you if you are too cheap, too easily irritated, AND too lazy to look. ;) It's like you want me to load your iPhone for you. sheesh!
How many apps do you need to do the same damn thing?
I have the Weather Channel app - it does what I need it to do. The same thing as every other app, it gives me the incorrect weather just like the guy on The Weather Channel. ;)
If I don't like it, I can download weather bug, or better yet - just hit 'weather' inside my USA Today app. Just for the record, as of this morning there are 254 weather applications in the Android app store.
If iPhone fanboys need 3,000 versions of solitaire and 30+ pages of weather apps to maintain their sense of superiority, more power to you. :uzi:
That's a pretty weak argument. More choices are always good. It's like saying that my Ferarri is slower than your Volvo because you don't want any gears above 2nd.
And weather applications was just an off-hand example. I don't think you really want to get into an app-for-app comparison (quality or quantity) between the two stores.
Kat had the best answer.
"I am sure that the iTunes app store has some extra stuff that the android market doesn't, but heck, if I'm not missing it then I guess I didn't need it junking up my phone in the first place."
Perfect.
This video is only tangentially related to the discussion but I thought it was pretty funny.
http://www.boingboing.net/2010/01/25...is-way-to.html
I know two people with the Droid AND the iPhone who prefer the Droid. They admit that you can't really compare the app stores as Apple just blows the Droid out of the water in that regard. However, they prefer the Droid because of the hardware superiority. They are satisfied with the apps that are presently available for the Droid (and encouraged that the Droid marketplace is getting larger every day).
I guess the final answer is use what you like.
Not really - it's more like having 600 versions of the Volvo with each one just having different option packages. Trying to find which one has the options you want becomes annoying after a certain point and you just end up using one that you like that meets your needs.
As I've said repeatedly, I like the iPhone. The ONLY reason I didn't own one was AT&T, the ONLY reason. That said, now that I've had my Droid for some time and I have experience with the iPhone - I'm not so sure I can say that if Verizon had the iPhone and Droid at the same time, knowing what I know now, that I would have still picked the iPhone. Particularly so for ME, due to my use of Google applications.
This does not apply to what might be coming with the next gen iPhone (or Android phone for that matter).
It's pretty rare to hear a geek complain about having too many software options. I think most people are going to be inclined to love what they own. And as you get more and more invested in it (emotionally as well as fiscally - apps add up) it becomes less likely that you'll sway.
Also, I'm not convinced that Apple is moving away from AT&T until the 5 year deal they had is up.