Tag Archives: Droid

I make no secret that I’m a fan of Verizon’s Android phone line – and I appreciate that they let me test out a lot of the gadgets. However, I get a lot of questions about the NAME. I spent 30 minutes once explaining to someone the difference between their HTC Hero Android phone and a Verizon Droid Eris – all due to naming. So Verizon, I may really like your stuff – but I question the naming convention you’ve gotten yourself into.

So here goes …

Droid is a product line of Android (Google) operating system phones from Verizon. If it’s not from Verizon, it may indeed be an Android OS, but it’s not a Droid. For instance, the Sprint EVO and Hero are both running Android OS. However, they are not Droids. A Droid phone has to be Verizon and run Android OS, but can be made by anyone. Right now, Verizon has good relationships with Motorola and HTC.

To make things slightly more confusing, the first phone released in the Verizon Droid line of phones was … the Motorola Droid. Yeah, I know. It’s basically the Droid Droid.

Verizon also has the HTC Droid Eris, the HTC Droid Incredible, the Motorola Droid X, and the Motorola Droid 2. I think the Motorola Droid Devour is still available as well. Where does it get really confusing? Well, I’m not exactly sure where the Android-based LG Ally falls. Is it a Droid or just an LG?

So, is your T-Mobile MyTouch a Droid? Nope, it’s an Android phone. Is your original Motorola Droid a Droid? Yep, because it’s from Verizon.

I know this seems a bit simplistic, but the amount of times I’m asked this question is a bit out of control. So when you see those Droid Does commercials from Verizon, just remember that even if your Android phone isn’t a Droid, it still probably does a lot of what the ad mentions. In my opinion, apps really help make a phone, and those are available to all Androids.

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Tweet Michelle @writetechnology, send her technology news at michelle[at]writetech[dot]net, visit her wine blog when you’re thirsty, and drop by one of her day jobs.

Have you ever had the sort of summer where everything gets away from you? That has been my summer. Back in early July, the good folks at Verizon sent me a Droid X to play with. I realized this morning that almost two months later, I still have it. They’ve been very patient with me considering that it had completely slipped my mind.

So, what do I think of the Droid X? Well, it’s a great phone. It’s also a big phone, so I won’t be trading in my HTC Incredible just yet. I need something that fits in my pockets a little more comfortably. But if you’re into bigger is better, you may absolutely love the Droid X.

Thin form, with a bump at the top to support the camera

The Droid X is everything the original Droid (it hasn’t even been a year) should have been. The keyboard, while virtual, I found extremely easy to use. It supports Swype and while I didn’t intentionally use Swype, it certainly typed easier than even my Incredible. It could just be the form factor – no matter which way you turn it, the Droid X has a huge screen.  It’s a 4.3″ FWVGA 854 x 480 resolution screen. It’s crisp and instantly responsive. Putting numbers aside, things just look pretty on the Droid X screen. It’s closest comparison would be the Sprint EVO, which has a slightly thinner, shorter form factor.

There are aspects of Motorola’s MotoBlur integrated into the Droid X, mostly apparent through a few apps and widgets. For the most part, the Droid X is pure Android though. If you’re familiar with HTC’s Sense UI for Android, then you know how different a UI can make this OS. Whatever parts of MotoBlur they added to the X, it’s few and far between. In fact, I’ve gotten so accustomed to the Sense UI, that it could be one reason I wasn’t bowled over by the Droid X.

Over the last 6 months or so, I’ve adjusted to the fact that physical buttons on phones may actually be a thing of the past. A while back, one of my favorite things about the Droid Eris was that the buttons were actually physical. There was a button for home, back, Phone, and so on. The Droid X picks up on this, with buttons for Settings, Home, Back, and Search. While the keyboard is virtual, the physical buttons are a nice switch.

With heavy usage, I’ve gotten one day of battery life out of the Droid X, which pummels my Incredible (for which I always carry a backup battery).  The most draining things on the Droid X battery are using the GPS for actual navigation and using the built-in mi-fi-like 3G Mobile Hotspot. While I believe it requires an extra plan from Verizon, you can easily replace your mi-fi or broadband stick with this feature. Running a test while traveling in Chicago, my husband and I hooked up a netbook, iPad, and full laptop to the Droid X signal and had great service.

The Droid X is a speedy machine, and I would expect nothing less. I laugh a lot about the specs of the new “super” phones. Years ago I had one of the first iBooks (in orange, with a handle). These phones at least triple the specs of that machine, if not more. The Droid X has 8 GB onboard memory, 16 GB microSD pre-installed, and supports up to 32 GB micro SD – total memory expandable up to 40 GB. It has a 1 Ghz ARMv7 processor.  Speedy. I sometimes look at my old/current MacBook Pro and think, “My phone might be faster than you.”

It has an 8 mp camera that works as fast as the camera in my Incredible. I turned my husband loose with the Droid X while we were on a Frank Lloyd Wright Walking Tour in Chicago and he got some great shots with bright colors. I find the camera button to be a bit stiff, but apparently its just a matter of personal adjustment. There is an HDMI out port on the device as well, which I didn’t get a chance to test. Note that an HDMI cable is not included in the box.

Photo taken with DroidX

As far as call quality, with and without Google Voice, I had great quality and no dropped calls. I had no trouble hearing anyone and they were able to hear me without any issue.

Overall, the Droid X is a great device. I hesitate to use the word “phone” anymore, as these devices are really uber-portable computers. I already have several friends who ordered the Droid X as quickly as I ordered the Incredible. While it’s certainly not the device for me, due to size and my apparent attachment to HTC’s Sense, it’s certainly a great addition to the Verizon Droid line.

It looks as if the latest batch of Droid X devices will be shipping by August 31. With a two-year contract, the Droid X retails for $199.

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Tweet Michelle @writetechnology, send her technology news at michelle[at]writetech[dot]net, visit her wine blog when you’re thirsty, and drop by one of her day jobs.

I had Verizon’s HTC Droid Incredible for 24 hours, they took it away, and then just as quickly sent me another one so that I could spend more time with it. I’ve had it about 2 weeks, although I’ve only been using it for one. As I mentioned previously, the Incredible lives up to its name.

It sports a rubbery backing that I like, covering a bright red “racecar” interior that peeks through around the camera lens and the speaker. The indentation on the backing actually follow the lines of the internal parts. I can appreciate that HTC is calling out that they designed a lovely device both inside and out. You have to remove the backing to get to the battery (replaceable) and the memory card slot.

Photo from C|net

Not that you really need that memory slot. The Incredible has 8 GB of memory built-in. That’s on top of the 1Ghz Snapdragon processor. This phone is faster than my first iMac. Full specs: 3.7? AMOLED capacitive display, 512MB of RAM, 512 ROM, 8GB of internal storage, an 8 megapixel autofocus camera with dual-LED flash, Wi-Fi, an accelerometer, digital compass, Bluetooth, GPS, and Android 2.1 with the latest Sense UI.

The Incredible comes equipped with a dual-LED flash 8 MP camera, fully loaded with similar customizable options that you might find on a low-end point-and-shoot camera. In fact, this phone could eliminate my need to carry a small point-and-shoot camera. Low-light photos and video aren’t bad. Not fantastic, but we are still talking about a mobile phone.

Right. It’s a phone. I haven’t had any dropped calls and it seems to have good call quality. People can hear me and I can hear them without any buzzing, hissing, popping, or blank spots. Here’s my first issue with the phone, and apparently I’m not the only one. I don’t seem to have consistent 3G. It can be sitting side by side with my Droid, which will be showing 3G, and the Incredible will not. Again, I haven’t had call quality issues, so maybe this is a display issue and not a reception thing.

As far as hardware goes, there’s an optical directional pad (which I’ve rarely used), a microUSB port and volume switch on the left, and power button on the top. That’s it. To launch the camera, you need to use the software.

I love the Android OS and have no complaints. Everything I ever used on my iPhone seems to exist in the Android market. Last night I counted up the apps on my Droid: I’ve downloaded and am using 42 apps. Now, the standard OS only gives you three screens to play with, but Sense UI adds four more. The Incredible will let me load up and easily access countless apps and widgets, as opposed to just accessing them through a pop-up menu.

Sense adds some other great features, but my favorite by far is the ability to pinch in and see all 7 of my screens – sort of an Alt-Tab fuction for the phone.

Other Sense-only widgets include a nice email viewing widget, an SMS viewing widget, and Sense’s own FriendStream. FriendStream lets you view your Facebook, Twitter, and Flickr streams without having to go to each individual app. Since it only pulls in one Twitter app, I don’t actually use it. I do like that I can post directly to Facebook and Twitter from FriendStream though – it’s a nice addition to the phone for someone who isn’t quite as account-overloaded as I am.

Sense also does away with the standard Android email app and uses Sense Mail, which accesses IMAP, POP, and Exchange accounts. As opposed to a true combined inbox, you have a pop-up view of your accounts, letting you know where you have new messages. I love 90% of the email program. It offers pre-filtered views, including the useful threaded Conversations, as well as Unread and Attachments.

This is where my second issue with the phone comes in though. I’ve posted this question to every forum, hoping there is just something I’m missing. I have gotten into the habit of starring/favoriting/flagging specific email messages on my phone to pay more attention to them when I see them on my computer later. I cannot find a single way to flag/star email messages within Sense Mail. I can do it in the Gmail app, and I can certainly download the stock Android mail app or K-9 and do it there, but not in Sense Mail. I notice that the Mail Widget on the HTC Hero (also Sense) even has a Flag option built in, so it’s not like it’s a foreign concept to the folks at HTC. So I’m working on this one. It is a dealbreaker for me in that I’d have to download and use an alternate email application.

Contacts are integrated with Facebook. This is good and bad. You can easily link contacts, as the Incredible is actually pretty conservative with its choices in linking. However, if you unlink, all sorts of weird things happen. For instance, I unlinked my stepmom’s Facebook account from the contact card for her and my Dad. Yet suddenly, my stepmom showed up as a contact all on her own, when she wasn’t originally. Weird.

HTC gives you an option to actually sync with your PC (not your Mac). Yes, you can use your Android phone and not have all of your information in the cloud. The software comes built into the phone. Alternatively, you can join me in the cloud and just allow your phone to show up as a hard drive on your computer. This worked with both my Mac and my PC. When I added a microSD card (16GB), it showed up as yet another drive.

I loaded videos, music and photos onto both the phone and the SD card without a problem. The Incredible found them, despite my slightly crazy-on-purpose filing system, and siphoned them off to the correct areas. This also included ringtones and notification sounds. (Note: The latter options had to be in specially designated folders to be recognized.) Sense makes the default music app slightly more aesthetic, which is nice, and I had no trouble pulling up and playing several episodes of True Blood on the video player.

YouTube is a little different. The Incredible automatically defaults to the lowest-resolution video on the site. You have to specifically tell it to show you the HD version. When I first watched the Muppets Bohemian Rhapsody on the Incredible, I was shocked at the low-res, until I realized I needed to just specify the resolution.

I’ve also heard complaints about the lack of brightness. But Boy Genius discovered that the Incredible default brightness setting isn’t the brightest, for battery saving most likely, which dims things a bit. Crank up the brightness setting and the colors just pop off of the screen.

Battery life is lacking a bit. Once I got used to the phone and wasn’t playing with it more than I usually might, I discovered that it didn’t last me an entire day. My default settings include turning off Bluetooth and GPS and dimming the screen, but those didn’t seem to make much of a difference. I’m hoping this is something they can fix with a firmware update, as they seem to have with the Motorola Droid.

I’m anxiously awaiting the accessories. There is a desk clock mode and car kit mode, similar to the Droid. While the Incredible doesn’t have the magnets in it, I’m hoping a rumored car dock and desk cradle will find a way to trigger those options. I’m pretty attached to my Droid accessories.

Back in the fall, I reviewed Verizon’s Droid and Droid Eris, right as they were being released. I loved the HTC Eris, but finally settled on buying the Droid for myself. Why? Because I wanted the “real” Android operating system and not the Sense UI wrapper around it.

And yet, tomorrow I’m “upgrading” my Droid to an HTC Incredible, which is really just an Eris on steroids and similar to the Google Nexus One. I’m getting an Android phone with the Sense UI wrapper. In my video review, I may have mentioned that I’m a little nervous about trusting HTC with this. After all, they haven’t (to my knowledge) released Android 2.1 for the Eris yet, even if leaked versions are available.

Regardless, I’m holding my breath and jumping in. It’s a good sign when the reviewer runs out to buy the phone. ;)

by Michelle Lentz

For me, 2009 was the Year of the Suitcase. I traveled more, for both business and pleasure, than I ever have before. That trend looks like it will continue into 2010, which is pretty exciting. In fact, my 2010 kicks off next week with a trip to Las Vegas for CES 2010, where I’ll probably find new gadgets to lust after. Until then, however, I’m thrilled with several of the gadgets that have gotten me through the last year of travel. Some of them aren’t as new as they possibly could be, and some of them are pretty basic, but they all serve their purpose.

Amazon Kindle 2: I pre-ordered this last February. It was my first big gadget purchase of the year and I don’t regret it for a second. Sure, I occasionally lose a lot of patience with Amazon, considering that it won’t read the ePub format. I am a big proponent of ereaders, Kindle or otherwise, and evangelize them to everyone. See me in an airport and want to play with my Kindle? No problem. It has made traveling a lot easier (I used to pack tons of books and now I just pack the Kindle) and I still end up reading myself to sleep by the light of a booklight attached to the Kindle cover.


Sennheiser PXC 250 Noise Canceling Headphones: There are probably better options out there, but these Sennheisers fold up rather small and slip into my purse or briefcase. They block out just about everything, which makes flying so much easier. They’re also a whole lot cheaper now than when I purchased them, currently coming in at $62.66.

Luggage Scale: Without fail, I tend to both overpack for a trip and shop once I arrive. This means I’m always checking one bag, despite the ridiculous fees. To keep myself on the safe side of 50 pounds, I rely 100% on a portable digital luggage scale. These things retail for around $13 and have routinely saved me on excess fees and helped control my overpacking and shopping urges.

Wine Diapers / Wine Skins: Being a wine blogger, I can’t seem to travel anywhere without a bottle of wine, and I also tend to buy wine where ever I end up. This means that I not only need to pack the 750 ml of liquid in my checked luggage, but I need to keep it from breaking and turning a white designer sweater pink en route. I’ve been testing out the Wine Diaper, which works well and has the benefit of being reusable, but I rather prefer the Wine Skin.

Dell Mini: I ordered the Dell Mini 10v rather cheap (<$200) from the Dell Outlet. Not only that, I was able to score a pink one, which I quickly outfitted with a pink mouse and pink USB stick. I purposely bought a lower-end Mini, the 10v, which has the VGA port. Why? Because when I present at conferences, I need it to be as easy as possible with a low-barrier for whomever is setting me up / letting me use the equipment. The Mini 10 (no V) includes fancy items such as GPS and an internal TV tuner. I loaded up the Mini 10v with Windows 7, Word and Powerpoint, Thunderbird, Acrobat, and Firefox. With just that amount, it’s perfect for presentations, email, and surfing. However, a few weeks ago I had to write an RFP while traveling. Don’t buy a 10-inch netbook for your primary machine if you need to write anything more intensive than a basic blog post. At that point, the 10-inch screen is a hindrance. But for travel and presentations, the machine is a dream.

Virgin Mobile Broadband2Go: To complement the Mini 10V, I also picked up the Virgin Mobile Broadband2Go stick. After doing some price comparisons, it seemed the best option. Most of the places I go actually have wireless. However, occasionally the broadband or wireless in a hotel will be ridiculously expensive or just a poor connection. Sometimes I even find myself at conferences where I don’t have wireless available in the sessions rooms. Remarkable, but true. To combat this sometimes-but-not-always problem, I went with the pay-as-you-go option. I tried it out for the first time last week in Key West and it worked beautifully. I was able to do everything from surf the Web to uploading files. I bought a $20 card, which got me 250 MB (the equivalent of 2 hrs browsing, 1 hour web video, or 25,000 emails).  It was a leisure trip, so I wasn’t online much, but I still have about 150 MB left. The catch is that your data allowance expires anywhere from 10-30 days after purchase, depending on how much you buy. But if you buy strategically (in my case, before every trip), it shouldn’t be an issue. The initial hardware purchase will set you back $99 and there is a lot of freedom in being able to get online anywhere, anytime.

Motorola Droid: I realize I just got my hands on this in November, but it’s quickly become a huge part of my life. Now that I have service everywhere I go (unlike my last two years with AT&T), I am constantly tweeting, texting and emailing. I realize that might not be a good thing, but my ability to be connected has greatly increased. The keyboard makes everything easy for me and I have no problem finding free apps I like and need from the Android Marketplace. I can’t say that the Droid has changed the way I communicate. But it enhances my communications and allows me to communicate in ways I couldn’t with my iPhone.

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Tweet Michelle @writetechnology, send her technology news at michelle[at]writetech[dot]net, visit her wine blog when you’re thirsty, and drop by her day job.

AppleInsider is reporting the rumor that Verizon may be getting the iPhone by Q3 of next year.

Qualcomm’s new hybrid CDMA/WCDMA chip offers the potential for a single, global iPhone that users can take to any major carrier, solving the network fractionalization problem. It also solves other issues that had served as roadblocks, including the issue of user confusion that would result from Apple selling separate CDMA and GSM/UMTS versions of the iPhone.

With one phone that works on both types of networks, any differences between the two (such as in features like conference calling and simultaneous voice and data, unique to UMTS) will be more apparently tied to the provider’s network rather than to an iPhone model itself.

They’re also reporting that the Verizon iPhone will be smaller (more like the Eris in size, I imagine), with a screen size of 2.8″.

The end of AT&T exclusivity means a couple of things:

  • If you were waiting for the iPhone to switch to Verizon so you can hightail it away from AT&T, your dreams may be coming to fruition.
  • If you were going to get a Droid or Eris because you wanted an iPhone-like phone, but didn’t want to leave the Verizon network, you might want to wait.

Why wait? Well, if what you really want is an iPhone on Verizon, you might not want to pay the early termination fee. Boy Genius reported last week that Verizon is upping their ETF for enhanced devices to $350. That’s a hefty price to pay, even pro-rated, to switch phones. The new ETF apparently goes into effect on Saturday, 11/15. I’m bothered enough that I’m sending my husband into Verizon on Friday, before I get home, to pick up my Droid. After all, there’s a huge chance I’ll switch phones within the next year or two.

I’m curious to see how many people leave AT&T once the iPhone is available on multiple carriers.

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Cheers!
Tweet Michelle @writetechnology, send her technology news at michelle[at]writetech[dot]net, visit her wine blog when you’re thirsty, and drop by her day job.