Did not get what you are shocked about. 
Didn't know the droid's screen is made of glass. Need to verify. 
Yes, I keep saying to myself that were it not for Android, Motorola cell phone 
division would be dead. The Droid is truly an awesome device. I just hope they 
don't loose focus by trying to churn out a million different devices every 
year.  Like Nokia that has a bunch of crappy useless throw away phones. 
On Apr 3, 2010, at 8:54 AM, Matt Kanninen <[email protected]> wrote:

I'm just a little shocked.  I guess I've been a professional mobile
developer for too long.  I spend a significant percentage of my
earnings on small devices.  Trying to debug without the real hardware
wastes a lot of time.

Bugs can be, specific to a phone carrier, a phone manufacturer, a
phone model, a firmware version, a specific users configuration of
software, specific user data/settings client side, specific user data/
settings server side, and the specific state of the server.

The fun part is figuring out where.  It is very hard to do this from
an emulator.  Emulators make it easy to develop applications that do
not work.


OF COURSE THE DROID IS THE BEST HANDSET!  Verizon has had by far the
most users, and strongest network, in aggregate, for a very long
time.  They were also tightly controlled, and that wasn't a
coincidence.  They didn't follow the GSM standard, but it's the best
standard that wins, not the one everyone chooses to adopt at first.

I've long been a Verizon user for my personal phone, because I like to
be able to make phone calls, and pull and push data over a high speed
network.  I was frustrated because my Verizon device was locked down,
and I was really excited about how T-Mobile was pushing UMA which
basically treated WiFi as another cell tower, giving you near total
coverage where you care about, but with VOIP level call quality.  So I
canceled my contract with Verizon, and bought a T-Mobile curve, which
I still use to this day for some random tasks, wifi only.  I love it's
UI, a keyboard and trackball you can use one handed.  It was
frighteningly easy to use while doing another task.


And then in the maiI I got an offer from Verizon to get the best phone
of the time, free, if I switched back.  It was clearly a letter that
was generated because something about my user profile triggered their
sales/marketing engine, and they wanted to keep my business.  I
couldn't afford it well otherwise, it cost as much as a cell phone not
made by Nokia or SE could at the time.  And more then most of those
companies models.


IMHO that best phone of the time was Verizon's most open handset at
the time, the BlackBerry 8830 World Edition.  The one where Verizon
would give you  Verizon sim card, to use abroad, it had both a GSM and
a CDMA radio, and it had a heavy Verizon color scheme because it was
the best.  I used that device past it's death, I had to pop the
battery out to charge it, but I could do virtually any task, pretty
well, and could communicate better then any other communication device
at the time.  It was also huge, by the standards of the day.  It was
clearly for power users.

At that time, Blackberry was the OEM that had the strongest product
across the carriers.  You could code in java, and somewhat easily
create an application.  It was basicaly J2ME, and it still is.  So the
8830 on Verizon was a no brainer for me.  You had a near uniform
experience across the carriers, but could still pick the Blackberry
you wanted.  The product was improved by the servers Blackberry ran,
to optimize the data being sent to the device, which needed to
conserve battery, etc.

And then I waited.  I was a real fan of Motorola, even though I knew
how sucky some of their phones were to developer for.  But they were
making all the right moves.  The RAZR 2 was a powerful feature phone,
running linux, IIRC.  Motorola embraced linux early, and they were the
perfect candidate for Android.  They were just ahead of the market.
Honestly it felt to me like Google created Android to save Motorola :)

Verizon needed an iPhone competitor, and the other devices couldn't go
toe to toe the way the Droid clearly does.

I don't like the shape o the D-Pad, but it does help keep the phone
slim.  I wish the 4 soft keys for the Android buttons were real keys,
and I wish the center of the D-Pad was a trackball you could push down
to select.

Thats it, otherwise the device is perfect.

P.S. the screen might be gorilla glass, but if you repeatedly drop it
onto concrete you may develop a hairline crack.  Don't stress, my
device continues to function fine.  It's a little glitchy, especially
the GPS, but I can't tell whether that has anything to do with how
hard I am on my devices.

Enjoy your Droids.  I'm playing Uniwar these days, it's a cool turn
based strat that reminds me of Avatar or Starcraft.  You standard
aliens, humans and bugs theme.

-MK

On Apr 1, 5:49 pm, Incognito <[email protected]> wrote:
Sorry, no nexus one.

On Apr 1, 2010, at 8:04 PM, CB <[email protected]> wrote:



Incognito:

Do you have a Nexus One?  How would you compare it?

Incognito wrote:
You probably already figured it out but in case not, you can  
disable flash in the menu. You must be in the camera app when you  
open the menu.

On Mar 30, 2010, at 2:50 PM, "Maps.Huge.Info (Maps API Guru)" <[email protected]
wrote:

I just received a DROID today (Device Seeding Program) and am
similarly impressed. My other Android device, the HTC Google ION, is
also a very nice phone but the soft keyboard just was very difficult
to use. The DROID soft keyboard is amazingly better. At first, I was
happy to have the pull out keyboard but after using the soft one a
number of times, I would say it will be just as easy to use the soft
one. For entering passwords or web addresses that require numbers and
letters, the pull out keyboard will be much better though.

The speaker is very clear and much higher quality than the ION as
well. Another really nice feature (this may be 2.0.1 vs 1.6) is when
using the phone, if you take it away from your ear, the screen lights
up. This is great for using a phone tree. With the ION (1.6?), the
keyboard requires unlocking before the dial pad can be used. The  
DROID
method is far better and easier to use.

The flash is a great addition to the camera. Often, I've been in
situations where the light was too low to take a good picture with  
the
ION. The DROID flash will be quite useful in those situations. The
flash isn't that bright but certainly is far better than no flash.
Time will tell just how useful it is. I would like to see a way to
disable the flash, perhaps there is but I didn't see it. There are
times when the flash is less valuable, like reading QR codes from a
screen.

On the negative side, I find the DROID to be very heavy and it  
feels a
bit delicate. I fear that dropping the thing will render it inop. The
ION feels a lot sturdier. I've dropped the ION several times and it
bounces very well. I think the DROID will dent or just break if
dropped. I could be wrong, not going to test that!

I'd love to compare the Nexus to this device, I'm hoping for a chance
at the end of May when I check in for Google IO 2010!

-John Coryat, USNaviguide LLC

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