Tuesday, March 02, 2010

Migrating from the iPhone to the Moto Droid: Week 1

droid-vs-iphone

I have been using an iPhone 3G for a little over two years, and a year before that I was using a first generation iPod Touch. For those 3 years the iPhone (and its operating system) has been my handy companion, helping to keep me entertained, and on track with every aspect of my life. It _was_ the ultimate smart phone.

I have spent many years using various Palm PDAs and they always left me felt wanting - I didn't know what I wanted, but the iPhone filled that spot perfectly.

I have been completely satisfied until recently, and this week signed up for a new 2 year verizon wireless contract, and bought a Motorola Droid.

What led me to do this?
- iPhone 3G was becoming increasingly slow. (Jailbroken or not). In an effort to speed it up, I restored it to stock firmware and lost 90% of the functionality that is important to me in a smart phone. iPhone 3G stock is useless to me.
- AT&T reception. Where I work, and spend most of my weekends, AT&T reception is poor at best. In most cases it would be faster to go to an Apple Store, buy an iMac, then hand carry that iMac to a starbucks to check my email then wait for the iPhone to find service and launch the email application.
- Boring, and nothing new in sight. 2 years is a long time to have a phone. Last year's update to the iPhone (iPhone 3GS) wasn't enough for me to extend my AT&T contract another 2 years, or plop down $500 for an unsubsidized phone. This last apple event apple announced the iPad. There was no discussion of the iPhone, or even the operating system they share in common. This disturbed me. Concentrate on the product everyone loves, dont split your focus to another product that doesn't solve a problem for me...

What do I want in a smart phone?


The Droid so far does _almost_ everything my jailbroken iPhone could do (and with speed and service). There of course are some gaps.

First, what do I do with my iPhone exactly? What is important to me in a smart phone that I keep with me 24/7?

- Calendar Notifications. I NEED my phone to sync with whatever calendaring system I am using (Google Calendar currently), and even more important I NEED it to notify me of events that are on that calendar. (iPhone: Stock calendar application)
- Calendar Agenda. Again, I am all about calendar support. I NEED to see what the days ahead have in store for me. (iPhone: Jailbroken LockCalendar)
- To Do List. I try to be a very organized person. I like lists. I keep extensive to do lists to organize my life. My phone needs to be able to sync with whatever solution I am using for To Do lists, even if I have to hand write it myself.(iPhone: Things)
- Note Syncing. I write notes about a lot of things that I need to remember. Same as above. (iPhone: simpleNote)
- Easy access to all of my email accounts. I get a lot of email (who doesnt) (iPhone: stock email)
- Real web browsing. I can stand stupid phone web browsers. The iPhone MobileSafari has spoiled me. I need that in a phone.(iPhone: stock browser)
- Reliable phone service. I work on an air force facility. I frequently need to make important phone calls. I need reliable phone service.(iPhone: I wish)
- Music playing. My phone is my iPod. I do not wish to carry multiple devices around.(iPhone: stock mp3 application)
- Terminal/SSH ability. I like to be able to access remote servers that I own at free will.(iPhone: Jailbroken MobileTerminal)
- Customization. I hate it when my phone looks exactly like everyone else's. My phone is mine, it needs to feel like home. (iPhone: jailbroken WinterBoard)

So why didn't I just get an iPhone 3GS and jailbreak it? It's faster than the iPhone 3G, and it meshes with my current environment, BUT the current model of the iPhone 3GS can't be jailbroken reliably. It currently requires to be tethered to a computer EVERYTIME you reboot it. Phones suck, they aren't stable, their batteries die, they get rebooted occasionally. This is a deal breaker for me.

Week 1


Android does everything Google under the box (makes sense). To even activate your phone you have to give it a gmail address.

It automatically sucked down my Google Voice contacts, and it was a chinch to setup Google Voice on it. The market place isn't as plentiful as the AppStore, but it does seem to have a lot of the quality applications covered.

So far I use the following to replace features of my iPhone:

- Handcent. Text messaging application at its finest. This is almost equivalent to biteSMS on a jailbroken iPhone.
- Astrid. Pretty solid to do list software supporting tags and due dates. Doesn't quite replace Things for me, as I rely fairly heavily on the syncing capability. Astrid does seem to sync with RememberTheMilk, so I will give that a whirl.
- KeePassDroid. There's too many passwords for me to remember. On my desktop I use KeePassX (http://keepass.info/ is free and open source for all platforms). iKeePass on the iPhone kind of sucked. KeePassDroid is pretty sweet.
- Haven't found a note syncing solution yet.
- BetterTerminal. Pretty great terminal.

Android lets me configure every notification sound to my content. Everything can have its own noise, no hacking required.

Best part of the new phone so far? The speaker is incredibly louder than my iPhone 3G so I can actually here phone calls and text messages.

I think I will keep it for now....

UPDATE: Three weeks later, I have decided to keep the droid, and even ported my AT&T number to VZW!  Goodbye iPhone!

3 comments:

DJ said...

Thanks for sharing Nick. Remember Matt Lawrence from Thomson Reuters? At my request, he implemented one of my ideas and wrote "Share My Apps":

http://www.mattlary.com/2010/02/13/first-android-app/

Might be useful for when blogging or sharing about what you're currently using. I wanted to add a few things that stand out to me:

For notes, try either Evernote's app or just bookmark http://gmail.com/tasks

wifi-tether (requires rooted phone) is great for sharing internet connection.

Radar Now - cuts straight to the point and gives you on demand radar

Mobile Defense - Allows locating and remote wiping of data if you lose your phone

Carol Pike said...

Hey Welcome back to the verizon fold. This phone is awesome! I wish I had more time to play with it but there never seems to be enough time!

Mom

Brion said...

I haven't tried BetterTerminal but I do enjoy ConnectBot for a simple yet powerful terminal app. Just wait until you get at 2.1 update - hello Google Navigator!