Google-Phone Review: Brains over Beauty - Google

By George
at 2008-10-17T21:45
at 2008-10-17T21:45
Table of Contents
By ANITA HAMILTON Thursday, Oct. 16, 2008
T-Mobile's G1 Android-powered phone, the first cell phone with an
operating system designed by Google
Mark Lennihan / AP
Most first-generation gadgets aren't really worth the bother.
They're overpriced, buggy, hard to figure out, and they break too
easily. But the G1 is none of these things. Not only is it worth
your while, the Google phone is easily the most exciting new tech
product of the year.
If the iPhone is the beauty, then the G1 is the brains. Sure, the
Google phone lacks much of the iPhone's external finesse: it's
thicker and has a slew of buttons and a slightly smaller screen.
But spend more than five minutes with T-Mobile's G1, which runs on
Google's new Android operating system, and you'll uncover its
inner brilliance.
The G1's Google Maps app, for instance, is genius. It incorporates
360-degree views of urban streets, plus an innovative compass mode
that shifts the onscreen image depending on how you hold the
device. Hold it up, and you'll see rooftops and blue sky. Point it
down and you'll see car wheels and pavement. No other smartphone
is so transporting.
The G1's 3.25-in. touchscreen works just fine, but I found myself
reaching for the built-in trackball instead. As BlackBerry
aficionados will probably agree, the impressive precision and
frictionless gliding of a trackball makes clicking on links
quicker and easier. It's also indispensable for selecting text to
cut and paste (something you can't do on the iPhone).
The home button at the bottom of the phone is a multitasker's
must-have. The G1 remembers the last six applications you used and
keeps them running and easily accessible in the background; press
the home button and a small menu pops up displaying the icon for
each open app. It's handy for those times when you want to play a
game, check the news online and snap a quick picture all within a
matter of minutes.
Google's Android Market, which will eventually include thousands
of add-on applications, doesn't officially open until the G1 goes
on sale Oct. 22. But the dozen or so free apps I tested in the
market's beta version worked great. Addictive games include a
shape-matching brainteaser called MisMisMatch, a beeping Simon
Says–type game called Android Says and classics like Pac-Man. The
BarCode Scanner is a handy app that lets you use the built-in
camera to scan a product's bar code at the store, then instantly
compare prices online. But my personal favorite has to be Cooking
Taster, which includes short how-to videos and easy-to-follow
recipes for ethnic food.
Other goodies: T-Mobile's 3G network was faster and more reliable
than AT&T's (Apple's carrier) in my New York City–based tests.
The speakerphone is louder and clearer than the iPhone's. And the
removable battery will save you money and time should it ever quit
on you — instead of bringing the whole device in to be repaired,
you can just swap out the battery yourself.
About the only thing the iPhone has on the G1 is the onscreen
magnifying glass, which lets you zoom in on text you want to edit.
Otherwise, the functional differences between the phones were
either inconsequential or improved in the G1. I thought I would
miss Apple's iTunes, but downloading music on the G1, from
Amazon's MP3 store, worked just fine and none of the songs were
copy protected. And I definitely did not miss having to sync my
phone with a computer to transfer applications, download songs or
update my operating system — something you often wind up doing
with the iPhone. The G1, in contrast, is its own self-contained
mobile device.
In short, the $179 G1 is the one smartphone that won't make you
jealous of people with an iPhone. Google's commitment to a free
and open market for add-on applications — users can even tweak
the open-source Android operating system — also gives gadget
lovers something to cheer. If nothing else, G1 will win geeky
hearts and minds everywhere with its reassuring end-credits-style
device info: "No robots were harmed in the making of this
product."
(Click here for the best shots from Google's Candid Camera.)
http://www.time.com/time/business/article/0,8599,1850888,00.html?cnn=yes
--
T-Mobile's G1 Android-powered phone, the first cell phone with an
operating system designed by Google
Mark Lennihan / AP
Most first-generation gadgets aren't really worth the bother.
They're overpriced, buggy, hard to figure out, and they break too
easily. But the G1 is none of these things. Not only is it worth
your while, the Google phone is easily the most exciting new tech
product of the year.
If the iPhone is the beauty, then the G1 is the brains. Sure, the
Google phone lacks much of the iPhone's external finesse: it's
thicker and has a slew of buttons and a slightly smaller screen.
But spend more than five minutes with T-Mobile's G1, which runs on
Google's new Android operating system, and you'll uncover its
inner brilliance.
The G1's Google Maps app, for instance, is genius. It incorporates
360-degree views of urban streets, plus an innovative compass mode
that shifts the onscreen image depending on how you hold the
device. Hold it up, and you'll see rooftops and blue sky. Point it
down and you'll see car wheels and pavement. No other smartphone
is so transporting.
The G1's 3.25-in. touchscreen works just fine, but I found myself
reaching for the built-in trackball instead. As BlackBerry
aficionados will probably agree, the impressive precision and
frictionless gliding of a trackball makes clicking on links
quicker and easier. It's also indispensable for selecting text to
cut and paste (something you can't do on the iPhone).
The home button at the bottom of the phone is a multitasker's
must-have. The G1 remembers the last six applications you used and
keeps them running and easily accessible in the background; press
the home button and a small menu pops up displaying the icon for
each open app. It's handy for those times when you want to play a
game, check the news online and snap a quick picture all within a
matter of minutes.
Google's Android Market, which will eventually include thousands
of add-on applications, doesn't officially open until the G1 goes
on sale Oct. 22. But the dozen or so free apps I tested in the
market's beta version worked great. Addictive games include a
shape-matching brainteaser called MisMisMatch, a beeping Simon
Says–type game called Android Says and classics like Pac-Man. The
BarCode Scanner is a handy app that lets you use the built-in
camera to scan a product's bar code at the store, then instantly
compare prices online. But my personal favorite has to be Cooking
Taster, which includes short how-to videos and easy-to-follow
recipes for ethnic food.
Other goodies: T-Mobile's 3G network was faster and more reliable
than AT&T's (Apple's carrier) in my New York City–based tests.
The speakerphone is louder and clearer than the iPhone's. And the
removable battery will save you money and time should it ever quit
on you — instead of bringing the whole device in to be repaired,
you can just swap out the battery yourself.
About the only thing the iPhone has on the G1 is the onscreen
magnifying glass, which lets you zoom in on text you want to edit.
Otherwise, the functional differences between the phones were
either inconsequential or improved in the G1. I thought I would
miss Apple's iTunes, but downloading music on the G1, from
Amazon's MP3 store, worked just fine and none of the songs were
copy protected. And I definitely did not miss having to sync my
phone with a computer to transfer applications, download songs or
update my operating system — something you often wind up doing
with the iPhone. The G1, in contrast, is its own self-contained
mobile device.
In short, the $179 G1 is the one smartphone that won't make you
jealous of people with an iPhone. Google's commitment to a free
and open market for add-on applications — users can even tweak
the open-source Android operating system — also gives gadget
lovers something to cheer. If nothing else, G1 will win geeky
hearts and minds everywhere with its reassuring end-credits-style
device info: "No robots were harmed in the making of this
product."
(Click here for the best shots from Google's Candid Camera.)
http://www.time.com/time/business/article/0,8599,1850888,00.html?cnn=yes
--
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