HTC Desire is, at press time, the only Android phone available in Canada that's even worth considering. Samsung Galaxy S is fail as a result of its carrier, Bell, being AIDS. Telus gives 5 gb bonus data for free. Limited video codec support but it's got the one that counts. Good call quality. Battery life is acceptable, use JuiceDefender and it's good. Performance very good. Ideal screen for video, text, outdoor visibility, battery life. Camera is shite, which is average for a smartphone, it's got a flash but... meh. Good browser. Lots of good apps, lots of bad apps. Android rocks. Steve Jobs steals organs that could've gone to less douchey people. Linux jab.
Is this spam? Almost. But it's really just enthusiasm.
Recently Bell released the Samsung Galaxy S here. As high-end phones go it's quite good, and I was very eagerly anticipating its arrival on our frozen shores. But it took less than a day for me to uncover a number of glaring flaws I knew I wouldn't be able to cope with in the long term. For example, a crippling lack of hardware buttons, bad battery life, greater difficulty in rooting, questionable manufacturer reputation, and most importantly, its vendor: Bell.
Bell is AIDS. They want $50 for their lowest-end smartphone (voice + data) package, and it comes with 500 mb per month and about 13 second of voice IIRC. That's 500 MEGAbytes, or in other words, just enough to check your mail a few times a day, or browse the web with all images disabled - obviously no YouTube or applications which sync a lot.
After trying that for a day and blowing through 120 MB just doing some very lightweight stuff on wifi to see how I'd manage, I tried my second choice, the also-newly-released HTC Desire from Telus.
Hmm... Oh that can't be right... has to be a typo... 5 GB for free? IN CANADA??!
No, not a typo. If you get a package that costs at least $60, they throw in an extra 5 GB of data transfer for shiggles.
So I got a $65 plan with 1 GB, got a free extra 5 GB, got "favourite 5 numbers" as my bonus feature, got an online number which automatically redirects to my phone, added that as one of my favourite 5, and I now have 6 GB of data, unlimited incoming calls, 300 outgoing local minutes, 4 numbers I can call for free even long distance, and then I signed up for a service that I can use to get 2.5 cents/minute long distance to anywhere in Canada and not much higher to anywhere else.
Still got screwed a bit since I went for the $15 unlimited text+caller ID "value package" though, which I know for a fact costs carriers absolutely nothing to provide. But I can tolerate that since to get even 3 GB on Bell I'd be paying $100/month. What a scam. Did I mention Telus is just a Bell reseller? So how the hell can Bell themselves justify that kind of price?
Anyway, as for the phone itself, it's really nice but doesn't support much in the way of video codecs. Just h.264 baseline with MP3 or AAC in an MP4 container, or else h.263 and XVID if you're stupid. Fair enough though, that's all my Cowon S9 supports anyway, and I bought it for the sole purpose of watching video. Baseline h.264 is still a hell of a lot better than anything else except main/high h.264.
Call quality is good, network coverage is allegedly good but I haven't had a chance to test this much, I got a recent-revision phone so it has a fancy wide-angle LCD instead of an AMOLED display, which I consider a plus since I plan to also use it as my car GPS. Phones with AMOLED displays are running into severe screen burn-in within as little as 6 months anyway.
Battery life seemed to be pretty weak until I found an app called Juice Defender, which disables the fast data connection when the screen's off. Seems pretty logical to me, should've done this by default IMHO. It leaves the data on for as long as something's downloading, and also re-enables it every 15 minutes for 60 seconds to allow anything to sync if need be. Performance seems to be outstanding, as you'd expect from a 1 ghz processor being asked to only render menus and basic text/graphics.
Not too much bloatware comes pre-installed, just one shitty game demo from "we make shitty $2 games" Gameloft and the various components that make up the HTC Sense UI.
Sadly, unlike the Galaxy S, the Desire doesn't come with Swype and the beta signup is now closed. However you can download one of the 9000 copies people have uploaded to rapidshare, etc. If Steve Jobs had called Swype "magical", I'd have no criticism for him (on that point).
The screen is gorgeous and if the battery information page is to be believed, doesn't kill the battery like the Galaxy S's screen does. Viewing angles are almost perfect, with little color shift or loss of brightness/contrast. It's basically on par with the Galaxy S in that sense; you get about the same viewing angle, better viewing outside, better battery life, but at the cost of a less impressive contrast ratio.
Text is exceptionally sharp and although I haven't seen an iPhone 4 in person, I strongly doubt that the DPI difference would be noticeable during normal use. The fact that Engadget now resorts to using a microscope to demonstrate the difference between screen DPI leads me to believe 800x480 on a 3.7" screen is more than enough.
The camera is pretty crappy, with mediocre quality and a crippling shutter lag, and the weak flash doesn't do much to help anything. Galaxy S had a far better camera, even taking into account that it doesn't have a flash.
At first I thought I'd be hindered by the Desire's rather weak (fingerquotes) "GPU", compared to the Galaxy S. However, after watching this video, I've come to realize that I'll actually be hindered more by the fact that I'm trying to play games on a phone with no game controls. Desire's got an optical trackpad which can also be pushed down and used as a button though, which seems like it could be pretty useful. I get the feeling any gaming I'll be doing on here will either be GBA emulation or simple 2D stuff, which doesn't disappoint me in the slightest. Why would I care, when the 3DS is right around the corner and it will actually have game controls, not to mention professional developer support?
The built-in browser is pretty quick, no complaints there, and it seems HTC has baked-in a lightweight version of Flash. You'll probably want to disable it to save battery life and avoid ads. I've never even turned it on, seemed pointless.
Regarding Android as a whole, there's a lot of talk about the Android Market having 60,000 flashlight and task killer apps, plus 10 useful ones. This is not the case. A few I'd recommend: 3G Watchdog, Air Control Lite, AK Notepad, Andoku, AndroZip, Bebbled, Favorite Frequencies (harass dogs, young people with good hearing), Gmote, JuiceDefender, JuicePlotter, Movies, Photoshop Mobile, RealCalc, Red Stone, Swype, Task Manager, TED Mobile, Torrent-Fu, Wifi Analyzer, Wikidroid, Yellow Pages, and anything from Google. I'd recommend others probably, but my phone came with ones baked-in for a lot of functions. These are just the ones I found since I got the phone yesterday.
Android as an operating system seems really well-made and the progress in just the last year alone has been staggering. The only threat I see to Android's continued adoption by handset manufacturers is the pace that the developers keep improving things. 2.2 only just came out officially and there are only two or three phones that even support it, and already there's talk of the next version coming out around the end of the year. Outpacing Apple is one thing, outpacing your own business partners is another. Handset manufacturers are used to updating their OS maybe once every 4 years, and the "update" is a new wallpaper. This isn't going to sit well with them.
In conclusion: Finally! A multipurpose smartphone that doesn't make me feel like an iPedophile.
I feel I must hereby rescind my previous statement that Linux is only good for routers. It's also good for phones.
