Hello, Milestone

22 February 2010 ,    1 Comment

Again, thanks to Will I’m now on my second Android phone, this time the flagship Android phone from Motorola – the Milestone (the GSM version of the Droid).

The quality of the photos of the device are a little so so – I’m fighting off sinusitis and bronchitis at the moment, so I just don’t care.

IMG_4377 

The Good

I think the design is one of those "love or hate" designs – it has rather striking straight lights and "sharp" corners, unlike most phones these days. It’s weightier than it probably needs to be, but that gives it an incredibly solid feel to it.

There is a lot to like about this phone, however there are two stand out features (for me)

The Bad

Not everything is perfect on the Milestone, however. These complaints however, are (mostly) me nitpicking as much as possible.

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Against the HTC Dream

The obvious comparison for me is between the Dream and Milestone, but mostly it should be considered an unfair comparison. For starters, the Dream was released in October 2008 whereas the Droid/Milestone in November 2009, and while the G1 wasn’t considered the lowest end in its day, it was never a real "premium" phone, which the Milestone clearly is.

Specification wise, nearly everything is better – faster CPU, higher res screen, more onboard flash, better camera, better Bluetooth support, the list goes on. However it is interesting to note that the Milestone doesn’t win in all categories.

Keyboard
Like the Dream, the Milestone is a slider with a qwerty keyboard. However unlike the Dream, the Milestones keys don’t have a gap between each key, are far flatter, and have less "travel".
The key advantage physical keyboards have over onscreen keyboards is the tactile response, whether it is being able to tell where one key ends/starts because of the key separation or by having to push the key down (rather than float over it).

IMG_4380

Apart from the less than ideal keys, the keyboard layout itself is a little funny. Instead of a five row key layout, they’ve gone for four which results in requiring alt to be pressed to enter a number. Although not as big a problem as the keys themselves, it is still a little frustrating.

Without a doubt, the Dream’s keyboard is just simply better.

It is interesting that the lower end Motorola Devour coming out seems to have a far better keyboard (Motorola promoting the raised keys)

Hardware Buttons
While the Milestone is not devoid of hardware buttons, Motorola’s choice of input is a little… lacking? Two (fairly standard) buttons are missing ("accept call" and "end call"), and unlike the Dream (and many Blackberrys) the scroller is gone in favour of a D-Pad which is hidden unless you slide out the keyboard.

Build Quality
There is no comparison here, and this is part of what I meant by the Dream not being a premium phone – the Milestone is just so solidly built with far better finish. The best example I can think of is the sliding mechanism – on the Dream it’ll rattle if the phone vibrates (call/notification/etc), whereas the Milestone is just solid.

Android 2.x

Apart from neat hardware, the other thing that the Milestone is rocking is Android 2.0.1, and what a difference it makes. Apart from everything seeming so much smoother and faster, Exchange support is built in! There are lots of improvements, but to be honest, I’ve barely scratched the surface of Android 1.6 let alone 2.0!

Google have a fairly detailed list of highlights for Android 2.0

I think the Contacts API is interesting, it allows multiple data stores for a single contact, so you could sync Facebook contacts to Gmail contacts. The Facebook app doesn’t work 100% for the Milestone (does for Droid/Nexus One) just yet, but it looks interesting. As does the possibility of extending this with Twitter/MahTweets Mobile.


Comments

One Comment

  1. Jarrett says:

    Nice pix and nice review. My wife and I both got the Droid back in Nov and it has literally changed our lives. There is no more waiting in lines or being “disconnected”. Instead there is tweeting and email and wikipedia, and apps to kill time while you wait.

    I wrote a little blog post about getting started with Android. http://jvance.com/blog/2010/01/22/GettingStartedWithAndroid.xhtml

    Also, I’ve recently started trying out the various roms available. Rom development is moving very very fast right now. New roms come out almost every day giving your phone new features. Check out alldroid and droidforums for the latest hacks.

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