Archive for July, 2010

Check these photos if you don’t believe me

See these photos of my HTC HD2 (well actually my brother-in-law’s HD2) running Android Froyo 2.2. Pretty much everything is working, and very nicely too. Check my previous posts on this topic for links to the Android builds if you want to try it for yourself. The builds are not being punted as completely stable, but I am using it as my primary phone and so far so good. Best of all is that Android runs from the SD card in the phone, so no damage to the Windows Mobile on the phone. I am running jmztaylor’s dual-boot utility which lets me choose to boot either Windows or Android at startup. Pretty nifty.

As far as I know only Google’s own Nexus One runs Froyo 2.2, which puts the HD2 in a very select group of phones. And with its hardware specs (1GHz processor, 4.3 inch screen), the HD2 running Android is a hard act to beat. Don’t know why HTC hasn’t released an Android upgrade for the phone. They will sell a zillion of them. Should call it the HDa.

Motorola Droid 2 coming soon

Engadget reports that Verizon will be launching the Droid 2 in August. Apparently it will be launched with Froyo 2.2 making it the first Android phone to be released with the latest version of the OS. I have also heard that it will have a 1GHz processor, compared with the 600MHz engine of the original Droid. I hope that the Milestone 2 will follow quickly on the heels of its US twin. I still use my Milestone regularly. Still the best qwerty based Android phone available currently. It is now freely available in South Africa, but the advertising has been very sparse. Think I have seen one ad for it only – in a Sunday newspaper. Haven’t seen anyone around here with a Milestone in their hands, except for yours truly.

HTC HD2 soon to be an Android phone

The HD2 is a fantastic piece of hardware. It has a 1GHz processor, still the fastest processor available in mobile phones. It has a humungous beautiful 4.3 inch capacitive touchscreen. It is thin enough to fit comfortably in my pocket despite the big dimensions of the screen. There is only one problem with it – it runs Windows Mobile, which is old, not suited to touchscreen devices and defunct since Microsoft announced Windows Phone 7. Luckily for us ordinary mortals the geekgods at XDA-Developers have been working an porting Android to the HD2. This has not been an easy process, apparently some issues relating to the SnapDragon processor, but recently a major breakthrough was made and since then in the last few weeks, one after the other builds have appeared. The latest ones are starting to be fairly stable. They are not ready for public consumption and daily use, as major bits of functionality are still missing, such as no audio through the microphone or speaker when making a call, but they are beginning to show that the HD2 will be a fantastic phone soon. Check out this video of Android running on the HD2 and if you are feeling adventurous and have an HD2 in your collection, head over to the forum thread at xda-developers.com. The installation procedure is not complex and not really risky at all, as it does not flash your phone’s rom. These early Android builds run from your phone’s SD card, and to get back to Windows Mobile you simply have to restart your phone.

Nokia N900 does not impress me

This morning I re-read my January post on Nokia’s Maemo-based qwerty slider called the N900. Why? Because I have had one in my hands for the past few days so I wanted to compare my expectations with reality.

Reality bites.

I know the phone is already 6-7 months old, but still, Nokia could not have thought that they can take on the iPhone or Android (or even Palm WebOS) with the N900. Firstly the phone just is not stylish – it is too thick and chunky. It doesn’t say look at me I am cool. It says look at my I am a geek. I know there are many geeks out there, and some of them are loving the open-source nature of the N900 and Maemo, but there are not enough of them to create serious market momentum behind the Maemo platform.

The slide-out qwerty keyboard is not bad, but is also not good. It has three rows only, with very little space between the top row and the edge of the screen. As a result my thumbs bump against the screen edge when I type on the top row. At least the keys are nice and large with decent travel. The keyboard on my Motorola Droid/Milestone is much better.

The screen is nice and bright with good resolution (not as bright as the Milestone), but is resistive. Those Finns and their gloves again I guess. The response of the screen is poor compared to any of the zillion capacitive screens out there. It is similar to the N97′s screen in terms of response. The N900 even comes with a stylus! I thought styluses (is that a word?) died out with Windows Mobile. Anyway nothing shouts geek like a stylus.

And then there is the screen orientation. Nokia has been marketing the N900 as a “mobile computer” rather than a phone, but forcing one to do everything in landscape orientation, except for phoning, is a bit much. It means you need both hands for pretty much everything. What a drag. Anyway I don’t see how this phone is more of a computer than any of the other high end phones out there, except maybe for the iPhone 4 which still cannot properly multi-task, something which computers have been doing for years.

Let’s look inside the phone, at Maemo the operating system, which at one point was touted as Nokia’s new high-end operating platform. If it is, Nokia is in trouble. Maemo may be open-source and powerful underneath, but it is dressed in out-of-date unstylish clothes. The user interface is better than Symbian’s but only just. Compared to WebOS, Android, and iPhone OS, it looks and feels way out of date. And it is just not finger-friendly enough. The multi-tasking works well though, with a single screen called the dashboard showing all your open apps. Not that you will have many apps open, as there are only a handful of apps available for Maemo.

The list of shortcomings in Maemo/N900 is long:

* No Youtube viewer. The browser (try Mozilla Firefox if you don’t like the on-board browser) supports Flash so you can view videos directly in the browser, but the performance and image quality is a distant second to the excellent Youtube apps available on all Android phones, Palm Pres and iPhones. Even the Winmobile HTC HD2 has a Youtube app.

* The browser is so-so. It doesn’t even reformat the text when you zoom in, so you have to drag the screen left and right in order to read text. What a pain.

* The N900 wouldn’t upload the phone contacts to my car’s bluetooth system. I read up on this and it seems this a missing feature in Maemo. More pain.

* The phone does not sync properly with Gmail calendar and contacts. Read about Maemo’s Mail for Exchange implementation here before you buy this phone.

* The biggest killer for me is that the support for corporate email and calendar stops at Mail for Exchange with no plans to support Lotus Notes. Not clear why Nokia has not provides Lotus Notes support, especially considering that the E72 comes with Notes Traveler built in. To me this is big sign saying that Nokia does not (never has or no longer) regard the N900 as their flagship nor Maemo as their new platform. I have asked the guys at Commontime to see if they can get their mNotes5 product working with the N900. If they succeed then the Lotus Notes geeks (like myself) will be able to sync our corporate email, calendar and contacts.

I can carry on with the litany of shortcomings, but I am fast losing interest in the N900. So, in summary, it is not good enough. Nokia needs something better, and they need it fast. Roll on Symbian 4.

 

Search engine optimization by SEO Design Solutions