Review: Motorola's Droid is a serious smart phone
By RACHEL METZ
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Since its debut in 2007, millions of people
have gravitated toward Apple's iPhone, wooed by its sleek hardware,
simple user interface and abundance of applications.
Other smart phone makers have been trying since then to dispel
the notion that the iPhone is the be-all and end-all of mobile
gadgets. The latest push comes from Verizon Wireless and Motorola,
whose Droid is a good alternative for those seeking a
feature-packed smart phone with a full keyboard and strong wireless
service.
The Droid stands out from the crowd of iPhone wannabes with a
slim but weighty body, noticeably angular look and large touch
screen.
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Its 3.7-inch screen is bigger than the iPhone's 3.5-inch one,
and the extra real estate really makes it easier to navigate Web
pages and play with applications. It also offers plenty of space on
the home screen (and two side screens that you swipe to see) for
software ``widgets'' that give a quick look at such things as your
friends' Facebook status updates or the song you're playing on the
built-in music player.
And the Droid's cost is comparable with the iPhone's - $200,
after a rebate, with a two-year service contract with Verizon
Wireless, its exclusive U.S. distributor.
The Droid runs the latest version of Google Inc.'s operating
system, Android 2.0, which includes some enhancements such as the
ability to zoom in on Web pages and photos by double-tapping on the
screen. With one tap on a photo in your contacts list, you can also
quickly see the ways in which you can contact your friends.
When it comes out on Friday the Droid will also be the first
phone to include a cool, free mapping application from Google that
can announce turn-by-turn directions.
Google Maps Navigation is easy to use and helped me out on a
late-night ice cream run - I put the Droid in my pocket, turned up
the volume and followed its female-robot-voice instructions while
riding my motorcycle across town.
I was glad to see that the application quickly recalculates your
route if you're prone to making wrong turns as I am. And if you
live in a busy city with unpredictable traffic, you might like an
option for getting alternate routes, all of which you can see
overlaid on the same map along with their distances and estimated
driving times.
Like other Android phones, the Droid has a voice search
function. It can be used, for instance, to help navigate routes
when you're in the Maps Navigation application. Saying ``Navigate
to Starbucks in San Francisco'' should give you a list of Starbucks
Coffee shops. Pick one, and you'll get turn-by-turn directions.
I'll probably stick with using the Droid's keyboard to get
directions, though, as it had a hard time understanding me. The
phone tried to send me to Ikea when I asked it to take me from my
office to my apartment. It offered me all sorts of unrelated
results when I tried to get directions to a French restaurant near
my home.
That's not to say the keyboard is perfect. Unlike many other
phones with standard, ``QWERTY'' keyboards, the Droid has keys that
are pretty much flat, which often made it hard to type accurately.
This wasn't helped by the fact that, aside from the space bar, the
keys are all the same size. Two blank key-sized spaces on the
bottom of the keyboard - one on the left, one on the right - made
me wonder why Motorola didn't try to at least enlarge the
often-used ``return'' key.
One Droid feature touted heavily in Verizon's television
commercials is its ability to run several applications
simultaneously, which is something the iPhone can't do. Generally,
I found that the Droid does this pretty well.
There were hiccups, though. As I was listening to music, I tried
to take a photo to send in a text message to a friend. Elvis
Costello started to stutter as I pressed the shutter button.
Another time, I tried to make a call while the Maps Navigation
application was running and had to endure very loud instructions
about where to turn while the phone was ringing.
I did like the Droid's five-megapixel camera, which matches the
resolution of another new Motorola phone that runs Android, the
Cliq, and can take sharper shots than contemporaries like the
iPhone, whose camera hovers around 3 megapixels. There's also a
very bright flash - another thing the iPhone and Cliq lack - so you
can take photos in low light.
The Droid's big screen makes for a nice viewfinder, and a small
menu of camera settings slides out from the left side of the screen
so you can adjust the white balance and use different color
effects. You'll have plenty of space to store the photos you take,
too, because the Droid includes a 16 gigabyte microSD memory card.
The Droid runs on Verizon Wireless' network, and I was pretty
impressed with its speed as I surfed the Web, looked up directions
or checked e-mail. It also got a generally solid reception for
making calls, and while my friends' voices didn't sound as clear as
they could, I didn't have problems with dropped calls.
Motorola has been struggling to come up with a phone that comes
close to matching the popularity of 2005's Razr, and the Droid is
the latest indication that Motorola is really trying to figure out
what consumers want.
It's also one of the most promising challengers to the iPhone, a
field that now includes Palm's Pre and Research In Motion's
BlackBerry Storm2.
Some Verizon Wireless customers have been holding out on getting
the iPhone - available in the U.S. only through AT&T - because it
means switching away from a service they are already used to and
like. For them, the Droid might be a good reason to stick with that
wireless provider.
Even if you aren't already using Verizon, if you're not swayed
by the iPhone, you might fall for the Droid.
11/04/09 17:28
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