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Phone Wars

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Posted on Apr 25, 2011
Flickr/nrkbeta (CC-BY-SA)

By Peter Z. Scheer

(Page 2)

Advantages:

Office. As you might expect, Microsoft does a pretty good job of getting the Office experience—so ubiquitous on desktops—onto a phone. But it’s not just good for Office; it’s way more functional than anything Word- or Excel-like that Google and Apple have come up with.

Zune. Microsoft recently announced the death of its Zune player, saying the company’s failed attempt to kill the iPod (itself now dying slowly of natural causes) will in the future be found only as a feature of Windows Phone, and that’s just fine. Let me admit here that I have Zune envy. For $14.99 a month you get to download or stream as many songs as you want—and, unlike with other services, you get to keep 10 of them forever.

Xbox. As with Office, Microsoft has done a pretty good job of integrating one of its most successful products into its new phones—at least that’s what I’ve read. I had a difficult time getting my Xbox Live account working with the phone and gave up after a short while.

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Disadvantages:

Fewer apps. As the newest kid on the block, Microsoft resorted to paying developers to make apps for its new OS. They’re at work, but for now there just aren’t that many apps, compared to the others.

Immature OS. There are certain features—cut, copy and paste, for instance—that are missing from Windows Phone. They’re on the way, we’re told, just be patient. As my Xbox experience above tells you, patience is not among my virtues. Windows Phone’s relative newness also means it is slightly buggier—but not by much.

Android

Google’s OS has come a long way in both form and function. The user interface is finally getting some cohesion and polish and you can now leave the house without a handful of extra batteries.

Advantages:

The Internet. Google and its fans make much of Android’s openness, but its real advantage is best captured by a quote of Google executive Vic Gundotra: “We discovered something really cool. It’s called the Internet.” You never have to plug an Android phone into your computer. Everything lives in the cloud. When you buy an Android phone, you tell it your Gmail address and it begins downloading your apps, syncing your contacts and reading your mind. You can install apps on your phone from your Web browser or send yourself directions the same way.

Voice. Like all voice commands, Android’s aren’t perfect—but they’re getting there. In any function where you can type, you can use speech-to-text. You can also interact with the phone—saying “Send text to George W. Bush, thanks for nothing!” will send such a text, provided you have the contact info.

Customization and Flexibility. Android is much more open than the competition. If Apple is a heavy-handed parent, Google is the older sibling who buys you wine coolers. Download whatever app you want, move the buttons around, and tweak to your heart’s content.

Navigation. Google Maps with turn-by-turn navigation isn’t just free, it works really well. Google also includes walking, cycling and public transportation directions.

Google apps. For people who use Gmail, Google Talk and the rest, Android offers excellent native apps that sync perfectly with the Web and cannot be found on other platforms.

Widgets. A phone’s desktop can tell you more than what apps you have; it can and should be alive with information. Windows Phone has “live tiles” to that effect, but they’re not as functional or fun as Android’s widgets, which display everything from the weather to music controls.

Faster browsing. Android’s Web browser is reportedly much faster than the iPhone’s, although individual experiences may vary depending on network and hardware.

Rapid evolution. Google releases new versions of the Android OS at a breathtaking pace, often adding features like turn-by-turn navigation that no one saw coming. Carriers tend to drag their heels in rolling these out, but there are ways to get the good stuff as soon as it’s ready.

Disadvantages:

Living in fear. I’m a big fan of Google’s open approach, but I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t worried about some of the programs I’ve downloaded from the wilds of the Internet. We run a lot of sensitive information through our phones—credit card numbers, addresses, sexts. Google’s approach is to let you know how much access your programs have, but that only makes me more nervous.

Battery life. Android’s power management is much improved, but it’s still noticeably worse than iOS or Windows Phone. This may be an unavoidable side effect of true multitasking, which only Android has, but that’s cold comfort when your navigation cuts out at the intersection of Van Nuys and Nowhere.

Openness perverted. Google is adamant that the manufacturers and carriers who make and sell Android phones can customize the OS however they like. The result is somewhere between moderately worse and worth throwing in a trash bin. Why these companies think consumers prefer a phone that’s slower, uglier and permanently bundled with a NASCAR app is a mystery. These customizations also slow the pace of Android updates, and even limit some of the operating system’s basic features, like free Wi-Fi tethering and the ability to side-load apps.

Media management. Until Google releases its long-rumored magic cloud for music, you’re better off paying for a subscription streaming service like Rdio than bothering with media files. With no iTunes or Zune, you can try a third-party syncing program or drag and drop. Either way, it’s mostly just a drag.

Confusing UI. Google has hired celebrity interface designer Matias Duarte to clean up Android. In the meantime, the OS continues to be a mess of long presses, hidden menus and other contradictory metaphors. It takes time to learn, and the intricacies elude some users.

Internet-addicted. A lot of the features listed as Android advantages vanish the moment the phone loses connectivity. Even a slow connection can impair your happiness. It’s one thing to discover the Internet, it’s another to be hopelessly dependent on it.

Having said all that ...

After spending a few weeks with these three phones, I came to the conclusion that there were two heavyweights and one promising upstart. Windows Phone 7 is attractive and eager, and it could grow exponentially as Microsoft leverages its resources and new partnership with Nokia. If these phones were people I met on my bus commute, I would keep smiling at Windows Phone, but I would make plans to grab coffee and a movie with iOS and Android. 

Whom Windows Phone 7 is for: Anyone for whom tightly integrated Office, Xbox or a great music streaming service is worth the sacrifices.

I promised to do only a software review, but the iPhone is much more exciting than the others in the hardware department and that deserves mention. It has a great screen (although too small for my taste) and an excellent camera. It feels extraordinarily well built. Too bad the OS is so boring. It looks exactly like my first real smartphone—the original iPhone. Apple has added countless new features over the years, but lately the company has been playing catch-up, and the software—from the intrusive notifications to the pinstripe settings background—feels dated.

Those grievances aside, no other mobile OS is as polished or reliable. The iPhone is Old Faithful. It works extremely well and continues to be the most effective convergence device ever created. Even when I’ve strayed to Android, I have relied on an old iPhone 3GS for music. That’s just sad.

Whom iOS is for: Anyone who wants the power of a smartphone with the size and convenience (battery life, simplicity) of a traditional cellphone. Also, anyone already plugged into Apple’s ecosystem or for whom a trip to the Apple Store is like visiting a porn shop in Spain.

Android has way more pluses and way more minuses. Not to resort to clichés, but you need to be kind of a nerd to get the most out of Android—and if you do, it makes the other phones reviewed here look crippled. As Android grows to dominate the market, average consumers are tossing themselves into the deep end and surviving just fine.

Whom Android is for: The geek who wants something new from her phone every two weeks, whether it can hold a charge or not. Charles Darwin, who believed in evolution long before Google made it a business model. And anyone on T-Mobile or Sprint.

Android is needlessly unrefined, but if you can look past its numerous blemishes, it’s the most powerful, feature-rich, future-friendly mobile OS, which is why it’s also my OS. Windows Phone 7 has some very cool stuff on the way, but I still have trouble throwing my lot in with Microsoft’s underdog. The iPhone isn’t just beautiful and convenient, it’s a pretty good deal. And there are lots of people who weighed the competition and went for the iPhone. When it comes to these devices, especially the iPhone and pure Android, just follow your heart. You can’t go wrong.

Author’s note: Thanks to Truthdig’s Lucy Berbeo, who obtained all the phones and made this review possible.


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By IVR, July 28, 2011 at 1:44 am Link to this comment

There is no denying that smart phones are changing the way people live and interact, although it all boils down to how quickly you need access to information these phones provide. For me, I still prefer reading books (yes, real books, not Kindles) or chatting than thumbing on rather pointless games to pass time in the tube.

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By LocalHero, April 29, 2011 at 1:27 pm Link to this comment

Nonsense like this only reaffirms my wise decision to
throw my cell phone into a river 3 or 4 years ago.

Don’t need ‘em and I certainly don’t need the tumor
that these things, given enough time, will produce nor
do I want my location tracked 24/7.

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By Mike G, April 29, 2011 at 6:37 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

The review of smart phones was a disappointment.  These devices are neither good phones nor useful computers because of hardware and software limitations. Wireless is the most hostile environment for communications and the signal is at the mercy of geography, proximity to the cell towers, weather, and unique technical problems such as cell breathing on CDMA networks (i.e., Verizon) that drops connections when cell towers are congested with too many users. There isn’t enough space to describe how poorly AT&T handles telephone calls on iPhones or the health issues posed by cell towers. Watching people fiddle with smart phones while driving a car is alarming and a reminder that humans lack the common sense necessary to operate devices that are neither good phones or useful computers. The mindless infatuation with smart phones demonstrates how truly disconnected we have become from our surroundings and the real environment.

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By ardee, April 27, 2011 at 5:02 am Link to this comment

As I was composing a criticism of this article’s content and its place in a political forum I recalled that the revolution in Egypt was fueled by tweets…..whatever the heck those are…...

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By doublestandards/glasshouses, April 26, 2011 at 6:00 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

After jailbreaking an iphone you can get an app which
disables the location tracking device.  Google “how to
disable the location tracking device on an iphone.”

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By Blackspeare, April 26, 2011 at 2:11 pm Link to this comment

That is a well researched and informative analysis of the cell phone choices——thank you.

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By TDoff, April 26, 2011 at 1:19 pm Link to this comment

Geez, the wired world eagerly awaits the soon-to-be-released, unisex INPAD, the programmable digital rectal vibrator with genital, mouth, nose, ear and brain insert attachments. It promises that users will be in constant contact with everyone on earth simultaneously, using all five senses, experiencing any and all sensations and activities that the INPADDICT can imagine. And all experiences will be recorded in the GLOCENDABA (Global Central Data Base), so that the INPADDICT can relive any experience at any time. GLOCENDABA, of course, claims to be totally secure and unhackable, so INPADDICTS are ‘not to worry about privacy’. 
What more could one want?!
Jobs, sensing big bites being taken out of the Apple, is rumored to be developing the UPPOD, which will offer essentially all the features of the INPAD, plus apps for constant contact with all animals, and extraterrestrials.
What will they think of next!?
Someday, maybe someone will come up with a device that lets users be alone, quiet, peaceful, and free to dream, imagine, and reminisce…undisturbed.

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By Privacy means very little, April 26, 2011 at 12:40 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

If you want privacy don’t get a mobile smart phone. The goal of all smart phones is to know as much about you as they can and they will only get better at this. Privacy policies are no help and in fact are carefully crafted to allow the mobile operators and OS developers to maximize the information they can collect from your device. Be very Leary of the word ‘Anonymous’ in privacy policies. Just because your locations are being recorded anonymously does not mean that your information cannot be reconstructed to determine who you are. In fact that is quite easy to do by just looking at the time of day where the locations were recorded and correlating with public records.

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By Leo, April 26, 2011 at 11:05 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

Economist Sen suggested ... famines (and other calamities I suppose) do not
happen in functioning democracies because their leaders must be more
responsive to the demands of the citizens.

Let’s face it, the political ‘leaders’ no longer are voter sensitive.  With the PR
machines they have, they pretty well control how the mass think and act.

When they need the votes, they throw money at it, and they get elected.  After
they did something horrible, they throw money at it, spin it, and everything
becomes okay again

The ‘smart’ phones are part and parcel of the whole system.

Sorry, we are defeated.  (By the greedy Corporate machinery)

However, in the grand scheme of things, this is only a brief period in the
history of life on earth, one needs to think of it in terms of 165 millions of
years.  The ebb and flow, the life cycle…  Someday, someone else will have a
better life.

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By Lafayette, April 25, 2011 at 11:30 pm Link to this comment

GET A LIFE

PZS: I’m not in a position to answer deep privacy concerns or address the long-term social implications of the screen-obsessed culture, but ...

Unfortunately, answers to the above question are the more important. What make of car you employ to run into a brick-wall is, really, of little consequence.

Privacy is simply a matter of staying away from such phones and, most importantly, the social web-sites (such as Facebook) that obtain personal information and sell it for purposes of data-mining. Which allows marketeers to sell your contact information towards directing pertinent advertisements to your phone. (Wow, what a money spinner that is ...)

You become like a laboratory rat, or perhaps Pavlov’s dog, a robotized human being who reacts to the world depending upon the stimulation made upon it.

That’s a dog’s life - responding to the latest whistle. Anyone dumb enough to willingly bring it upon themselves, because they are otherwise inept at constructing a life of True Value without the mindless Advertising Pablum proposed, probably deserves it.

Get a life ...

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