Pak Agus, Apa screen 3.1" tak kekecilan? regards,
Rudi On Sep 19, 2009, at 12:35 PM, Agus Hamonangan wrote: > <Motorola CLIQ_FrontOpen-thumb.jpg> > > > > * …Considering this is only the third-ever Android phone and that we > only got an hour to play with the phone under the tutelage of some > Motorola reps. > > The CLIQ is a heavy phone. I don't just mean physically — it makes a > weighty impression after using it for just an hour. Besides some > nice convenience features (like a headphone jack), the phone's real > secret weapon is the MOTOBLUR software, which leverages the Android > OS to better organize everything on your phone that doesn't involve > calls. Which these days is a lot. > > More after the jump. > > Physically, at 5.7 ounces, the CLIQ (see more photos here) is > surprisingly heavy, but it was hard to figure out why. You get > Android's pop-up touch QWERTY as well as a three-line slide-out > QWERTY keypad, which is easier to handle with easier-to-read keys > than the keyboard on the first-ever Android phone, the HTC-made G1, > but tougher to type on. The keys are packed tight and require a > solid press to register. Along with a 5MP camera, there's a > headphone jack, annoyingly missing from both the G1 and the MyTouch > 3G. The rear has a sure-grip texturized rubber surface. > > To minimize the number of hard buttons on the front panel and > thereby create more room for the touchscreen, Motorola has removed > the physical Send and End keys and moved them to the touchscreen, > along with a Contacts touch key. To make the screen more readable > and to save power, the display has an ambient light sensor to > automatically adjust brightness. The battery savings goes to talk > time — CLIQ is rated to get an impressive 7.5 hours > > Even if CLIQ's physical amenities were awful, its exploitation and > expansion of Android alone make it the new Android standard, setting > a new paradigm for organizing the ever-increasing number of a > cellphone's non-verbal communications. The philosophy behind the > CLIQ and Motorola's MOTOBLUR Android-plus interface is that there's > no reason to keep track of multiple social networking, messaging and > e-mail accounts. When you initially set-up the CLIQ, it prompts you > for all your e-mail and social-network information. It aggregates > all the data from all these sources — all contacts with phone > numbers, e-mail addresses, etc. (but maintains the original data > within their individual applications) to create on big, super-meta > file. For instance, you can choose one picture of yourself from all > your accounts to be your caller ID photo to others. > > You now get three onscreen dialog bubbles (at least that's what they > look like to me). "Messages" collects all your incoming one-to-one > messages, "Happenings" collects all social networking feeds, and > "Social Status" aggregates all your personal status messages. Tap on > one dialog bubble and you can swipe through all categories of > communications, regardless of source, and you can reply easily via > any source. For instance, if you get an e-mail, you can respond via > text simply by choosing this option from a list in the message > window. If someone writes on your Facebook wall, you can reply via e- > mail. You can broadcast a blast to all your peeps on multiple > networks, or just one. You can update your status on all your social > networks at one time. > > You also can opt to display dialog bubbles for individual Yahoo > Widget RSS feeds. If you don't like swiping through sequential > dialog bubbles — and you will — you can simply view them listed in a > more convenient swipe-scrollable list. > > All of these dialog bubbles can really crowd the home screen panels > on the 3.1-inch screen, so Motorola has expanded Android's three > home panels to five. Even still, any shortcuts you've dragged from > the app menu silo to the home screen are apt to get buried > underneath the multiple dialog bubbles. > > MOTOBLUR also replaces Android's photo gallery with a far superior > swipeable gallery with cool 3D transitions, not only from photo-to- > photo but even as the accelerometer turns a photo to fill the > screen. And of course you can broadcast one or multiple photos to > some or all of your social networks. > > Since MOTOBLUR's reorganization of the CLIQ's non-verbal > communications is so radically different, it took almost the full > allotted hour to grok it. But once we did, it was clear its radical > efficiencies render mere talking an annoying inconvenience. > > > > http://dvice.com/archives/2009/09/hands-on-moto-c.php > > > > -- > Salam, > > Agus Hamonangan > [email protected] > > > http://groups.google.com/group/id-gtug/ > > http://groups.google.com/group/id-android/ > > > > > --~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~ Google Groups "Indonesian Android Community [id-android]" group. 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