HTC’s Evo might be the last phone running custom software on top of
Android that you should even consider buying. Because the whole trend
of skinning Android has become a horrible, dividing mess.

The problem with an Android phone running a phone manufacturer’s
home-brew software, like HTC’s Sense or Sony’s TimeScape, is
well-known: You’re going to wait a lot longer to get the freshest
version of Android. That wait wasn’t a big deal in the past. But as of
Android 2.2, you should think a bit more deeply about which Android
path you’re going to walk down.
The Problem With Custom Skins

They’re awful. HTC’s Sense interface was widely regarded for making
Android better when it showed up on the Hero a year ago. Well, Sense
is the exception, not the rule. Some truly hideous atrocities have
been committed in the name of Android, like Samsung’s Behold II. Not
every skin is quite that offensive, but even what I’d consider the
average, like Sony’s interface for the Xperia X10, is cloying and
confusing; with the Evo, even Sense started to feel a bit tacky. The
point should be to make Android sexier and easier to use. They don’t.

Android’s caught up. As of Android 2.2 Froyo, there is basically
nothing any of the custom interfaces do that Android doesn’t. A year
ago, Android lacked a great many things, from social networking powers
to decent Exchange support to remotely accessible settings. HTC’s
Sense filled in those massive gaps, once upon a time. But now Android
juggles multiple calendars, smoothly integrates Facebook and Twitter
into contacts (more seamlessly than any of the custom skins), lets you
quickly access settings from the home screen, and even has built-in
Wi-Fi hot spot powers. At this point, none of the custom software
builds add killer features anymore.

They’re too slow. A corollary of the above point: Not so long ago,
Android was behind the best of the custom interfaces. But now, Android
is evolving so quickly, it not only caught up, it’s zooming past those
meddling with its software. Frankly, the custom interfaces need to
innovate faster to make themselves worthwhile — as it is, it seems
pretty likely that the next stock version of Android build will be
superior to anything phone makers can offer (in fact, I would argue
that 2.2 is already). But think about it: How likely is it that
hardware companies are going to be able to keep up with Google, who
finally seems to have hit its stride with Android?

The reasons to buy an Android phone with customized software have
effectively dissolved. They don’t look better; they don’t work better;
and they’ll hold you back from getting the latest and greatest updates
from Google, possibly by many months. Most people don’t care or even
know that their phone really is a computer, meaning it can actually
get better via the magic of software updates. But if you’re reading
this, you probably care. Android 2.2 is a markedly more excellent
experience than 2.1. The best stuff at this point seems like it’ll
come from Google, so riding the bleeding edge of Android is the place
to be, more now than ever.

Maybe that’ll change in another year, if Google slows down their
release cycle as drastically as Android chief Andy Rubin says, to just
once or twice a year. Which will be kind of a sad moment when it
arrives—the thrill of Android, at least for geeks, is how fast it’s
moving. But that’s when it’ll be safe to jump on the slow road. Until
then, I’ll be sticking with the official, (probably) annually released
Google phones.

Read More 
http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2010/06/androids-acne-problem/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+wired%2Findex+%28Wired%3A+Index+3+%28Top+Stories+2%29%29#ixzz0qJ47cVoH



-- 
Salam,


Agus Hamonangan

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