Archive for the 'phones' Category

Froyo for Nexus One

Lots of posts and happiness about the unexpected early availability of Android 2.2 aka Froyo for the Nexus One. But sadly the update fails if you have the AT&T version of the phone as it has a different build number (EPE54B vs ERE27).

So those of us on AT&T still have to wait with everyone else.

My phone is the perfect way to read books

I know that most people will shake their heads and call me crazy. I mean, seriously – even the Nexus One (which has one of the bigger screens among phones) has only a 3.7″ display. Tiny.

But stay with me for a moment. The reason I never bought an ebook reader is that I don’t want to carry yet another device with me. I have way too many already. So I instead carried paperbacks. Silly, I know. A kindle would have been smaller. But another several hundred dollars? Plus content from only one monopolist (and we know what that does to prices).

A few weeks ago I tried reading a book on my Nexus One and was positively surprised. The AMOLED screen is great for reading – no backlight! And the best thing about reading books on your phone? If you are anything like me, your phone is always with you. So you can read your book wherever you are, wherever a sudden break comes up.

Yes, the screen is tiny and you flip pages a lot. But it’s not as painful as it sounds – give it a try. I’ve now completed three books on my phone and I think I’m hooked – which makes me feel very sorry for our neighborhood bookstore…

The thing that finally won me over is that there’s a surprising amount of choice when it comes to reading books on an Android phone. You can read Mobipocket books (via FBreader – and Calibre if they are DRM infected). You can read books from Diesel ebooks, ereader.com and of course Barnes and Nobles. The latter is somewhat surprising at first since they explicitly don’t support Android – but it turns out that the free ereader Android app reads Barnes and Nobles ebooks as well. The download from your library somehow fails with the Android browser (still need to figure out why). But download to your computer and manually transfer to the eReader directory on your sdcard and the eReader app will find them and display them just fine. Turns out eReader is a subsidiary of Barnes and Noble and they use the same DRM technology and keys.

With all these choices, most books are available. And you often find wildly differing prices. The book I’m currently reading (Nine Dragons by Michael Connelly) I found in every single one of the stores mentioned with prices from USD 9.99 (Barnes and Nobles) to USD 27.99 (Barnes and Nobles subsidiary eReader.com). Go figure.

Nexus One – the best Android slate phone

My good friends at Google have done it. They’ve created a truly awesome phone.

I’ve only had the Nexus One for a day (it was waiting for me when I returned from a trip, yesterday) and must admit that I’m thoroughly impressed.

Is this the “iPhone killer”? I don’t know and frankly I don’t care. I never liked the iPhone and haven’t used one enough to really compare them.

Is this the best Android phone? Absolutely. Well, as long as you don’t have to have a keyboard. I know people who just cannot deal with touch screen input, those might prefer the Droid. Or they might not.

The thing about the Nexus One is that it is fast. Impressively fast. It’s testament to the fact that 99% of all phones have an insufficient CPU (and that definitely includes all iPhones – and the rest of the Android phones that I’ve played with). The experience of having a phone with a CPU that is actually fast enough for its software stack is quite amazing. And of course this immediately made me want to get my hands on an LG GW990 – a phone with a real CPU (Intel Atom) and an OS that I am somewhat partial to (Moblin).

But oddly even though I’m part of Intel’s Open Source Technology Center – no one is willing to get me an LG GW990… so for now I’ll enjoy the Nexus One, running a competitor’s CPU.

I think we’ll see the same development in phones that we have seen in PCs in the past. For the next few years Moore’s Law will bring us faster and faster phones – and we will wonder how we ever lived with the slow phone we had last year. That’s certainly how I’m feeling right now.

Thank you, Google. And don’t rest on those laurels, the Atom based phones are coming.