I walked into Best Buy at release date and didn’t see any lines. I asked for the Motorola Droid and got set up in about 15 minutes. The Droid is the first Android device I’ve played with, and I’m slapping myself for ignoring this platform this long. I was able to setup my email, contacts, calendar, and install apps faster than my Nokia phones and the iPhone. I guess it helps that I already use a lot of Google services. I’m sure many of you do too. After just a couple of hours of usage, I give you my unboxing and first impressions.
Android Market has a lot of apps and it is connected to my Google account. I don’t know how, but it already had my credit card info. I’m guessing it’s because I used Google Checkout before.
Google Search by voice is awesome and recognizes what I want. My favorite is the ‘Navigate to’ command.
Keyboard is useable for me, contrary to what I’ve read in other places. Maybe they have bigger thumbs than me.
I don’t like:
The camera’s autofocus is horrible. It takes 3-4 attempts to make the auto-focus bracket go green.
I can’t find the damn question mark on the keyboard. Where the hell is it? I couldnt find the ‘?’ on the Droid because I was looking for it as an ALT key. It’s actually next to letter L as a primary button!
I can’t tell if an app is still running in the background or already quit. Holding the home key shows the last 6 apps I’ve opened.
So that’s my first impressions of the Motorola Droid. I’ll give it some more real-life usage before publishing my full review. If you want to purchase this device, Amazon is selling it for $149.99 with a service plan.
Customers who purchase the smartphone at Best Buy Mobile can avoid the hassle of mail-in rebates with instant savings applied at the point of purchase. The phone will retail for $199.99 with two-year activation.
I’m confused why there’s no mention of Nokia in this article.
Android will edge out Blackberry, Palm and Windows Mobile before it makes a dent in the iPhone market. iPhone customers have proven to be too loyal and resilient to adandon their handset of choice.
November 6th is the arrival date. Sounds like a very good device.
DROID by Motorola has a solid exterior, intelligent interior and is one of the thinnest full-QWERTY slider phones available. It is a no-fuss, high-tech, location-aware, voice-recognizing, over-the-air updating, multi-tasking machine – and it is available just in time for holiday wish lists.
features good ol’ WCDMA 850/1900/2100 — the bands AT&T uses for their UMTS 3G — alongside GSM 850/900/1800/1900, making it the perfect adoption candidate for both AT&T and Rogers.
will the Motorola Droid be successful? Absolutely, we think. It will eat in to BlackBerry sales, Windows Mobile sales, and positively murder any lingering Palm Pre sales. It’s that good.
This is the second Android phone after Dell Mini, which is being launched in China ahead of Worldwide launch. According to previous rumors about this phone, a possible Q1 2010 release is expected
I’m getting really interested with this device. I guess the ads showing up on the Yankees games are working.
One of our tipsters has send us pictures of Best Buy´s internal documentation that reveal an Android cell phone equipped with 5-megapixel camera and QWERTY keyboard, components that the Motorola Droid sports as well, is getting released through the retail network of the company on 24 October at a price of $599.99 without contract.
a decent low-to-mid range handset with BLUR, and a high-end super smartphone, both Android of course. This would give Verizon customers (mostly those fickle teenyboppers) a real smartphone completely positioned for their liking, instead of the featurephones which shall remain nameless that are currently available on Big Red.
it makes the CLIQ looks like a child’s toy partly because it is, and partly because the Droid, even in its non-final form, is the most impressive phone we’ve used since the iPhone.
3.7in touchscreen rocking Android and Qwerty keypad.
the cameraman has elected to apply just enough wide-angle this time around to give us a full-on view of the high-end Android beast in its closed position
T-Mobile ’s newest Android phone and Motorola’s first touchscreen smartphone is available to existing T-Mobile customers October 19 and everybody else on November 2 for $200.
Combined voice and data bundle can cost as little as $55 per month versus the $70 of AT&T or Sprint.