A Flood of Android G1 Full Reviews

Image courtesy of T-Mobile USA

Image courtesy of T-Mobile USA

Many mainstream tech journalists and major tech blogs received T-Mobile G1 review phones last week.  The phones came with the condition of a press embargo.  No one was supposed to publish anything about the devices until today.  The floodgates are now open and the web is awash with of G1 reviews.

A few of the better ones I’ve seen so far:

  • ZDNet’s Matthew Miller has probably the most comprehensive review with seven pages, five videos and 260 images including a shot of every single screen and dialog box on the phone!
  • The deans of US tech journalism, the Wall Street Journal’s Walt Mosberg and the New York Time’s David Pouge offer well-balanced overviews of the G1’s strengths and weaknesses.
  • Engadget, Gizmodo and jkOnTheRun each do their typical through job with lots of photos.
  • Boy Genius Report has one of the more critical reviews. BGR in particular bemoaned the lack of consistency across apps.
  • Christopher Price at Phonenews.com takes a concise look at the G1 with an emphasis on how it compares with Windows Mobile and the iPhone.
  • Om Malik weighs in with a very independent “What I Love & Hate About T-Mobile G-1 “. In particular, Om disagrees with most of the other reviewers on the G1’s IM ap saying “This has to be the best Mobile IM client on the planet!”  and on the phone’s dialer which he doesn’t care for.

So what seems to be the consensus of these early reviews regarding the G1’s strengths and weaknesses? Pretty much as I predicted before the G1 was launched, there is a fair amount of negativity in these reviews. The G1 is a very 1.0 device.  Google likes to get code out in the wild at a fairly early stage in the development process and then continually improve it over a long Beta.  Android is no different.  The big G made a commitment to release the first Android handset in Q4, 2008 and the G1 is what’s ready now.  The phone’s “cons” are a reflection of Google’s continuous Beta philosophy and will likely morph into “pros” in due time.  Remember that the Android OS can update itself and it’s applications OTA, so the G1’s software will improve which age.

To get into specific pros and cons,  multiple reviewers found the G1 lacking in the following areas:

  • Form factor: compared with devices like the iPhone, Blackberry Curve and Nokia E71, the G1 is ugly, bulky, thick, and heavy. Phonenews’ Price said, “there isn’t any wow-factor when you take the phone out of the box. Walking around town with the phone, there weren’t the people dropping their jaws when the phone was pulled out. The G1 is a 2006 version of the HTC Wizard, the AT&T 8125, and the PPC-6700 on Sprint and Verizon.” The forward jutting “chin” at the talking end of the phone was faulted for both it’s aesthetics and for getting in the way of typing. As the Boy Genius put it “WHY IN THE HELL IS THE DAMN THING ANGLED AT THE BOTTOM LIKE A BANANA?
  • User interface inconsistencies, especially compared with Blackberry and the iPhone.  Even among the built in Google apps, there are different paradigms for common functions like zooming the display or deleting an item from a list.
  • Missing features like the lack of video recording, no standard headphone jack, very limited Bluetooth support (you can’t use stereo Bluetooth headsets or use Bluetooth for transferring files, using the phone as a modem or even to do voice dialing).  Other prominent omissions are the lack of desktop syncing, no turn by turn directions in Maps, and the fact that there is no on screen keyboard except for the phone dialer.
  • Software and hardware limitations: Applications can’t be stored on the memory card, they all have to fit in 128MB of internal flash memory. The phone’s 3G radio only works on T-Mobile’s oddball 2100/1700 frequencies, so if you take your G1 abroad you will be stuck with slow GPRS/Edge data. The G1’s camera and ability to get a GPS fix were generally described as mediocre.
  • Immature and limited built-in aps. Few reviews seemed to have anything good to say about the  Email and IM apps in particular. BGR said “..emailing is probably one of the worst things the G1 does. It’s clunky, slow, and unresponsive if you are on EDGE. Plus shortcuts are pretty much non-existent.” and “Speaking of instant messaging, how is it? As far as smartphones go, it’s one of the worst experiences we’ve had.
  • Lack of document support Android doesn’t ship with a viewer for MS Office or Google Docs file. There’s no PDF or Flash support either

On the other hand there were a number of raves about some aspects of the device.

  • Over and over, the Android OS was praised as smooth, fast and stable.  Especially telling was that at least three reviewers predicted that Android will absolutely kill Windows Mobile and was noticeably more responsive than S60 and even the iPhone. Pouge said “…it’s polished enough to give Windows Mobile an inferiority complex the size of Australia; let’s hope Microsoft has a good therapist.”
  • Fast robust multi-tasking with instant switching between running apps.
  • The scrolling Home Screen with pull down notification “curtain” that reminded (in a good way) several reviewers of the Microsoft XP desktop.
  • The G1 got high marks as a telephone, particularly in the areas of call quality, the dialer and speaker independent voice dialing.
  • Integration with Google services; including single sign on, push gMail and seamless syncing of contacts and calendar to the “cloud” .
  • The Android Market was found to be responsive and easy to navigate. Granted it has less than 50 apps and games in it at this point but there are several useful apps available already including an excellent video player, a weather app and a  bar code reader that’s not limited to 2D codes but can decode 1D UPC “zebra”s letting you scan a product’s label while shopping and having the app do an online search for best prices.
  • All the things the G1 has that the iPhone doesn’t: MMS, copy and paste, a hardware keyboard, voice recorder and the ability to use any MP3 file as a ring tone.
  • The trackball was well liked, Miller wrote that the “… textured finish of it keeps it from slipping under my thumb like my BlackBerry Curve pearl trackball does at times.”
  • The Threaded messaging app got some notice. It integrates SMS and MMS and lets you respond to messages by snapping a picture or recording an audio clip  without leaving the application.
  • The large, bright display and responsive touchscreen.  “Almost as good as the iPhone’s”,  seemed to be the consensus.
  • The web browser got pretty high marks too, although most reviewers also rated it not quite as good as the iPhone’s Safari.  One thing I noticed in the videos was that, although it doesn’t seem to have my preferred “fit to width” mode where the page is re-flowed into a single column, it appears to require much less side-scrolling than other “keyhole” browsers.  With S60WebKit and the iPhone, if you zoom in to the point that a single column of text just fits the screen, images floated in that column push text off the screen and require side scrolling.  Android re-sizes the images and re-flows the column alongside the image so that the text still fits the reduced width eliminating side scrolling.  Well done Google!

One thing that most of the reviews seemed to agree on was that Android’s openness will eventually make the OS a formidable competitor.  Forget the clunky G1 hardware.  Thanks to an open OS, in six months to a year there will dozens, maybe hundreds of Android phones in all form factors at multiple price points to choose from.  It’s the same story with software.  There are no restrictions on Android software development and deployment. Anyone can make an Android application.  This sort of wide open application environment is what drove the early success of platforms like Palm OS and MS DOS and Windows. Sure there will be lots of lousy applications, but there will be plenty of great ones too.  Just as with Windows, the marketplace, word of mouth and the lazy web will do a pretty good job of connecting users with the best applications or games for their needs. There are over 9000 Palm OS apps, more than for any mobile platform, including all sorts of specialized long tail and vertical applications in areas as varied as medical diagnostics and bicycle wheel building.  The majority of the current Palm applications were created in the first years of the platform’s history before the advent of restricted API’s and mandatory signing.  With Android’s similar openness, we will see thousands of highly varied Android applications and games released over the next year.  As with Windows, a platform’s success depends on the availability of software. As ZDNet’s Dana Blankenhorn so aptly put it, “With Android it’s the software, Stupid

Related Posts:
How Big is the Android Phone?
Anticipating Android at Google I/O
Why Android Matters
Android First Impressions

4 thoughts on “A Flood of Android G1 Full Reviews

  1. I prefer the G1 regardless of its thickness. I think it’s a better choice. Just read the reviews.

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