Posts Tagged ‘ Motorola

Motorola Droid Pro launches new form factor for Android

It has been more than a month since my last post. Sorry for that. Moved house, been on holiday, kitesurfed, now I am back. Not that much has changed on the smartphone front during this time. Still waiting on the release of Nokia’s new qwerty slider the E7, although having had the N8 for a while now, I doubt that the addition of a physical qwerty will be enough. Compared to iOS and Android, Symbian^3 is pretty pathetic, with or without a keyboard. O, and I see there are a couple of Windows Phone7 phones available in SA. Too early to buy a Windows phone I think. Not nearly enough apps and developer support for Microsoft’s new phone platform.

I have also been using an HTC Desire Z aka TMobile G2 for a month or so now, so expect some comments in future posts about this phone. Or maybe not. It is good, runs Android 2.2 and has excellent qwerty keyboard, but is somewhat boring. So maybe I won’t have much to say about it.

Now the Droid Pro looks a lot more interesting. I haven’t got one in my hands yet, but hopefully will soon. It is the first Android phone with a candy bar form factor and fixed portrait qwerty keyboard a-la Blackberry. Motorola is clearly taking aim at Blackberry with this phone, especially when you look at the activesync enterprise features loaded on the phone.

The Pro has a 1GHz processor so I expect it to be very nippy. Screen is a bit small for my liking at 3.1 inches but that is the trade-off to get the fixed qwerty I guess. Should be great for one handed use, and will also be great to not have to flip the phone landscape every time you need the keyboard.

It is also a true quad band phone with support for GSM and CDMA. So you can use it in the USA (CDMA) and the rest of the world (GSM).

Will let you know what I think of this phone soon as I get it.

Motoberry!

Motorola has been turning out Android-based smartphones at a rate of knots, and in every conceivable form factor. Have you seen the Flipout or the Backflip? I think they are simply throwing designs out to see which ones will stick. The Droid Pro is one such design which is going to stick I think. It is a design that has been used successfully for years by Blackberry – portrait with a fixed qwerty keyboard. Coupled with a 1GHz processor and Android 2.2 which provides enterprise email integration and document editing capabilities this promises to be an impressive device. The device will come with other enterprise goodies, such as remote wipe, complex passwords, device and sd card encryption and VPN ability.

If you are a corporate Lotus Notes user you will be very pleased to hear that Notes Traveler for Android is in beta. Hopefully by the time the Droid Pro lands on your desk you will be able to sync your Notes email, calendar and contacts using Notes Traveler.

The Droid Pro will launch on Verizon in the States in the next month or so. No word yet on a European launch, but if Motorola does release it in Europe it is likely to be called the Milestone Pro. South African droiders shouldn’t hold their breath though, as Motorola has been very slow in releasing their Android phones here. Point in case: the Milestone was launched in Europe/UK a year ago, while it became available in South Africa only a month or so ago.

Motorola Milestone 2 launched. Coming to SA also

Motorola launched the non-US version of the Droid 2 today, calling it surprise surprise Milestone 2. Apparently the Droid moniker is somehow tied to Verizon in the states, which is why the rest of the world has to make do with the much less catchy Milestone label. Nevertheless, as a happy Milestone 1 owner, I am looking forward to the faster processor (1GHz OMAP), improved keyboard and Android 2.2 Froyo. The Milestone 2 also looks nicer than its older sibling, although still not really a good looking phone. But then, I know a die-hard iPhone user, who after 2 days with the Milestone 1, swore to never go back to iPhone. Go Android. Best news is that the Milestone 2 is due to hit SA shores before the end of 2010. See below for more pictures.

My Milestone is faster than yours

Last week I overclocked my Palm Pre to 800MHz. Today my 500MHz Motorola Milestone is clocking 1.2GHz. Does that make it the fastest Android phone on the planet? Close, if not. You need two apps to achieve this, both available from the Android Market: Easy Root and Milestone Overclock. Easy Root from unstableapps.com lets you root your phone without having to do any techie stuff. Will cost you a dollar or two, payable via paypal at unstableapps.com, in order to get your registration key, but definitely worth the money. Milestone Overclock is free and lets you set your phone’s cpu at various speeds all the way up to 1.2GHz.

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.

Motorola Milestone still in daily use

It has been four months since I got my Milestone/Droid, and I am still using it daily, well most days. It is not as if I haven’t played with other phones over the past four months, but I keep going back to the Milestone. It is just such a good all-round performer, with a large, beautiful, capacitive touch screen, fast processor, Android 2.1, and best of all a large qwerty keyboard. And Motorola has been good in providing regular firmware updates over the air. Only yesterday they announced that the Milestone will be getting Android 2.2 shortly. The Google Nexus One is the only other phone that has received the latest Android update to date.

My favourite Android apps used on the Milestone are ChompSMS, Twitdroid, WordPress (with which I update my blog directly from my phone), Scan2PDF (with which I can scan a document using the camera to PDF) and best of all Touchdown by Nitrodesk with which I sync my corporate emails, calendar, tasks and contacts. Touchdown syncs with pretty much any ExchangeServer, but I use it to sync with my company’s Lotus Notes server via Lotus Notes Traveler.

I saw the first local mention of the Milestone in the Sunday Times over the weekend, so South African consumers should be able to get a Milestone on contract soon. Go get one, you won’t be disappointed.

It’s official, Droid de-thrones iPhone

Martin Cooper, who was in charge of the team that developed the first mobile phone (a Motorola) has reportedly ditched his iPhone for a Droid. Bearing in mind that the man is 81 years old I would like to know how he deals with the small fonts on the Droid. Apart from the font issue I also prefer the Droid to the iPhone. I have been using my Milestone Droid since the beginning of the month and it has grown on me. According to Mr Cooper (I could never call the inventor-god of the cellphone Marty) Motorola built the first cellphone and the rest of the system required to make it work, within 3 months. Their phone convinced the US regulator to not award a monopoly right to AT&T, whose vision of the mobile phone was a car phone, and the rest is history. Martin Cooper is my hero. You can follow him @MartyMobile on Twitter.

My first couple of days with the Motorola Droid / Milestone

After using the Droid (ok, mine is actually a Milestone, but that is such a lame name, and too close to Millstone, which given the heft of the phone….) for a few days I am no longer so sure that this phone is going to kick butt. I know it has been selling very well in the States, but I wonder how much of those sales were due to the huge marketing spend by Motorola and how much due to the phone’s own intrinsic appeal.

Ok, let me start with the things I like about the phone. It has a large 3.7 inch capacitive screen that is large enough to render complete web pages. It is also very sensitive to the touch and a pleasure to work with gesture-wise. Mine has multi-touch support, while the real Droid doesn’t (or didn’t when originally released late last year). The phone is very fast, faster than I expected given that the Arm Cortex A8 CPU (a 600MHz, OMAP3430 chip downclocked to 550MHz) also powers the Palm Pre. The Droid is definitely fast than the Pre. The keyboard is excellent in terms of the size of the keys, travel and tactile feedback. The keyboard feels like a high quality affair, like the rest of the phone.

Typing on the Droid is somewhat spoiled by the lip sticking out the right side of the phone (when holding it in landscape mode with keyboard slid open) as well as the space used by the dpad. The result is that the phone juts into my right hand and requires my thumb to have to stretch. Quite uncomfortable. Also not enough space between the top row of keys and the bottom of the screen which makes it hard to type numbers (these are on the top row).

The vanilla Android interface on the Droid is not very slick, especially when compared with HTC’s Sense as implemented on the Hero, or with the Palm Pre’s WebOS interface. It could do with a bit more pizazz. Font size control is also completely absent, and with the small fonts used on the Droid, I have to put on my reading glasses every time I use the phone. Giving my age away here I guess, but Android badly needs the ability to change font sizes. So does, WebOS for that matter, but I at least managed to patch WebOS to get bigger fonts. Windows Mobile has had the ability for years. So has Symbian. Blackberry leads the pack here, providing a large variety of font sizes and types.

Then there is the Droid’s battery, all 1400mAh of it. It is just not good enough. I haven’t been able to get through a day (12 hours) on a single charge. Even using JuiceDefender to limit the data connection to 2 minutes out of every 15 minutes has not helped enough. It did improve the battery life, but not enough for a full day’s operation, and it meant that the phone would not connect at all outside of the 2 minutes window, which is very irritating when you are trying to surf the web for example. I see the Seidio has a 2800mAh battery for the Droid, but it makes the phone heavier and uglier, neither of which the phone needs.

Google integration is good as can be expected from an Android phone. The Youtube client delivers excellent quality videos, coupled with the screen, maybe the best quality Youtube videos I have seen on a mobile phone to date. Android market is also good, and downloading and installing apps is a painless (and free, since I can only access free apps) exercise.

My overall impression after the first few days? I am back to using my Palm Pre.

My new Motorola Droid

image

I have been watching this phone for some time now. It looked like the perfect Android phone, for me at least, with a large screen and most importantly a qwerty keyboard. So eventually I gave in and bought one from my trusty online mobile phone retailer cacell.co.za and 2 days later I had the phone in my hands. Here is a picture of the phone while I was typing this post on it using a WordPress blog posting app for Android. The Android market rocks. Quick to find apps and quick to install them. But why do I see only the free apps on the market. I can’t see the paid apps. Does anyone know why this would be?

The Droid or Milestone is a beast. It looks all angular and industrial. It feels hard and masculine. The metal casing gives it a very durable feel. The phone is thin for a qwerty slide but heavy. My initial impression is wow this is one serious mobile phone. It is going to kick butt. Watch this space for more posts as I explore the Droid.

Motorola resorting to gymnastics in attempt to devour smartphone market

Motorola Backflip

Backflips and splits are what the Motorola engineers are resorting to. I kid you not. The Backflip is another Android phone, but this one has a trick up its sleeve. It has a reverse hinge design that flips the keyboard behind the screen with the keys facing out when not in use. The keyboard also functions as a stand. Check it:

If that doesn’t perplex or impress you, have a look at the Split. Details are still sketchy for this Android phone, which may hit the market place late this year. It will reportedly sport a split qwerty keyboard. One half slides out the base and the other half out the top of the device. Rumours of a 1Ghz SnapDragon processor is giving extra bounce to this story.

Motorola Split

Better give Motorola 10 out of 10 for these efforts, otherwise they may just send the Devour to sort you out. Yet another Android phone, this time with a slide out qwerty:

Motorola Devour

Go Moto!

Glowing red cyborg eyes, bombs dropped from stealth fighters, emotionless calls of “DRRROOOIIID” every time you get a text message — it’s enough to scare yesterday’s lunch out of anyone. Verizon’s no-holds-barred advertising campaign for the Motorola Droid has been so hellishly frightening overwhelmingly successful, in fact, that it appears to be paying dividends either directly or indirectly against Moto’s biggest rivals.

YouGov’s BrandIndex — an ongoing survey measuring brand loyalty through some secret-sauce methodology that only analysts would fully comprehend — shows a marked spike in Moto’s score in the critical adult male category, while Apple and RIM have taken hits over the same period. These numbers look terribly volatile over a relative short span, so we’re not going to be rushing to any conclusions — but by any measure, it’s pretty wild to see Moto go from a has-been to besting the bulletproof cult of iPhone in just a few short weeks.

The Motorola Droid – an Android milestone

The Motorola Droid has been launched in the US with a lot of media activity.

It is being touted as the phone to resurrect the flagging Motorola brand, and of course the usual iPhone-killer claims are also being made.

It will eventually make its way to South Africa as well, 1st quarter 2010 I heard, but if you can’t wait that long, head over to www.cacell.co.za who is selling it as the Motorola Milestone. Apparently the Droid moniker was dropped for markets outside the US. Why, I don’t know. And why Milestone I also don’t know. Personally prefer Droid. Milestone too close to millstone (of the around my neck variety).

Anyway the phone looks promising. I have been using an HTC Hero aka G2 Touch for a while now, in between using the Palm Pre, and have been very impressed with Android. Have often felt the Hero would be the perfect phone if it had a real qwerty keyboard. The Droid has a real keyboard. Of course HTC’s Sense user interface added a lot to the slickness of the Hero. Will have to see if Motorola’s use of the native Android interface works for the phone.

 

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