Thursday 8 October 2009

Google’s G1 Android Handset Released Early November


Google-G1There has been quite a bit of talk recently about the release of the new phone by HTC using 's Android.

Android is a open source smart operating system for mobile and is developed by the Open Handset Alliance led by .

The which is the first phone to be released using Android will be available in the UK in early November and the rest of Europe 2009. The handset will be exclusive to T-Mobile (they are a founding member of the Open Handset Alliance) and will be free on price plans from £40 a month (no news on pays as you go), which will make it competitive with the iPhone on pricing, which is “free” for a £45 a month tariff from O2. You can pre-register with T-Mobile here www.t-mobile.co.uk/tmobileg1.

In the US the Phone will be $179 - very cheap for a smart phone - and will be launched on October 22.

T-Mobile are touting the to have a “Superior user experience” and they predict their Web 'n' Walk will get a 250% increase in Internet traffic.

The has a touch-screen interface and a Sidekick-like keyboard, which will really set it apart from the iPhone.

Google-G1-2

With you can swipe, frame and crop a photo to the homescreen. Street view and maps look great. Compass (GPS) mode moves as you move. Comes with Talk, Maps with directions and traffic view, street view with landmarks. Facebook looks good in the Webkit browser. The Music player has advanced features. The Android Market will be an app store for games and apps. It has a dedicated search button on keyboard, which competition authorities might take a good look at.

Unfortunately it does have some major downsides (for me at least!). There is no Exchange functionality (even the iPhone has this!), it can not be used as a tethered modem, and there is no 3.5mm headphone jack.

Exchange is a big one for myself as I use my phone for business and I like to synch everything, there is the opportunity for third party developers to build for this.

Engladget have confirmed that the will use a proprietary ExtUSB connector, meaning you'll need custom headphones or an adapter to plug in your own, AND the adapter wont be available immediately at launch!

I have been quite excited by Android, and I love HTC (I just hate Windows Mobile) but I think this phone may some key features missing that will stop me buying it. I am confident we will see some brilliant using Android, and once more 3rd party applications are available this phone could very well be more appealing.

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