Archive for the ‘Carrier’ Category

iPhone 4a vs. iPhone 4v – AT&T vs. Verizon – a real extended comparison
by Troy Saxton-Getty

People who know me often ask me why I usually have two iPhone 4′s with me most of the time. The answer is, one is AT&T and the other is Verizon.

As a long time fan of AT&T I was in line the night before the first iPhone was released and have picked up the new model each time it was released all the way to and including the first Verizon iPhone a bit over 6 months ago.

The most frequent question obviously is which phone or carrier service is better…. ??

Better is such a subjective word… better how? It has taken a number of months of testing in-the-real-world to get to the hard and accurate facts.

The test environment: Hundreds of conference calls a month, sometimes calls lasting 5-8 hours, some with stock headphones, some without, many linked to one of four car Bluetooth systems and quite a few with multiple Bluetooth headsets. (Jawbone, Bose and Motorola HS-10HD). Testing/use is primarily in three AT&T/Verizon markets – San Francisco, Silicon Valley, occasional east coast trips and San Diego (with several trips to various US markets as well as a few trips to Singapore and India). When on a conference call, generally, it is split between four different services giving a wide variety of volume and background noise levels and last, the same exact case on both phones, the basic bumper from Apple.

The past six months represents extremely heavy use equally divided between both AT&T and Verizon and here is what we have found.

Battery Life:
Equally, the phones have a very close battery consumption and battery standby power usage, neither will make it a full day of hard core use without some supplemental charging, quite often we utilize any one of the battery charger products tested here at dropSKIP (see other articles on several battery charging and extending options). If you are a casual / normal non-business user, you can expect the batteries on either phone to make it most of the day. Voice calling is by far the toughest demand on either phone’s battery, on average vs. our entire suite of Android phones, the iPhone4 wins on battery longevity. Our T-Mobile HTC HD7 comes very close in casual use but not on heavy voice calling days.. Winner? iPhone 4 perfect tie.

Voice Quality:
This measurement isn’t the same as reliability (dropping calls, time to connect to dial and seamless transitions while in motion are all not about voice quality)

This measurement is about audio sound quality of voice reception and transmission only, hands down AT&T has a much richer voice dynamic range, the voice quality is noticeably better on the AT&T phone for both listening and talking. The Verizon iPhone sound for both listening and talking is clearly less robust, most users will call the difference “tinnier” when compared (Look up the word if it doesn’t make sense to you). If we give you both phones on the same conference call, one in each ear, you will immediately hear the difference. Winner? AT&T iPhone 4

Voice Reliability/Availability (Averaging all markets):
This is the golden measurement, dropped calls, signal enough to make and sustain a call. I went six months of using both phones equally to be damn sure of how I felt, due to availability of signal, often I would have only one clear choice and most of the time that was Verizon.

Verizon on the iPhone 4 is vastly superior to AT&T on call reliability. Most of us know the annoying spots that our iPhone drops a call if we take the same route repeatedly, like commuting to and from work. On a regular morning staff meeting one of our guys says ok, the AT&T iPhone is going to drop me right about “click” and we all laugh about it because it is part of the AT&T experience. Just to share some idea of the magnitude of the difference: on my typical morning commute of a bit more than 50 miles, The iPhone will drop me 3-7 times per drive (no less than 3 from Midtown SF to northeast San Jose. What is even funnier (ok, frustrating) is it happens constantly on the I-280 in the Bay area right by Apple’s HQ and Stanford, I often wonder how pissed off Apple employees are about this since a gazillion of them drive this way every day. Using the Verizon iPhone4, over 6 months, same time of day, same commute, I’ve been dropped 3 times in 6 months… You do the math… Verizon, did I mention I love you for this? Each time I am on the AT&T iPhone for this commute and I am on critical business calls, the phone drops me at the most important or critical portion of the call, almost like it is just plain mocking me. AT&T, really? Did I mention the reason I am writing this article is because you have dropped me on my commute for the last time, in the immortal words of Steve Martin, I break with thee, I break with thee, I break with thee.

I have talked on a 6 hour conference call from Southern California to Northern California (non-stop) using the Verizon iPhone 4 and not drop the call, not even once. In fact, in the rare times that a call on the Verizon iPhone does drop, I am almost floored. Same 6 hour call on AT&T, I can expect a drop every 15-45 minutes and sometimes it drops over and over again right after you connect back to the conference call adding to the extreme frustration of everyone, including the “Troy has LEFT the call” Then, “Troy has JOINED the call.”
Verizon, you are the winner, hands down…

Data Speed(3G):
Although Verizon has better data coverage, it’s common to get wildly different results just based on your distance from the transmission point (the tower). Verizon offers the fastest consistent speed, AT&T tends to offer the fastest throughput if you get all the conditions right and only in a much more limited location choice. Both fall back to slower speeds using the previous technology and usually Verizon wins again on the slower fall back speeds. Data quality feel is more robust on the AT&T phone, as long as you have fairly high signal whereas Verizon wins overall for having consistent speed more of the time. Our only beef here, is Verizon data is not available while on a voice call, this might not seem like much of a big deal but more and more it’s a huge annoyance when you are on a voice call and someone asks you, “did you get the email I just sent with the presentation?” and if you are on Verizon, you didn’t. (This will change with 4G LTE on Verizon, but the iPhone 4 on Verizon is CDMA data). Even more frustrating is being on a call with the Verizon phone and you need to use Google maps, or something critical to your current mission of travel and it flat doesn’t work. I have to say, I am really frustrated with this. The longer you are on the call the longer it takes the phone to catch up on the data when you get off the call. I am talking about the pseudo lethargic response the Verizon iPhone 4 has right after you get off a multi-hour call and it’s busy catching up on the truck load of email that’s spooling up waiting for data to return to the Verizon iPhone.

Winner: AT&T iPhone 4, love the data, love it more when it works when we are talking on the Phone.

Data Availability:
Availability means – Consistent data access in more places, more reliably and with reasonable speed. IMHO, Verizon wins when it comes to having data access in more places than AT&T. (in the domestic US Only) AT&T will often make you think you have data due to the icon representation of bars and 3G, but when you go to use it, often times it struggles. On the Verizon iPhone 4, the indicators are much more reliable and so is the data availability. Looking at the six month average in all markets, road trips, airports, freeways and private plane flight – Verizon domestically smokes AT&T.

Winner: Verizon iPhone 4

International:
CDMA is not a world standard, Verizon is limited to the US Market and a few other countries where CDMA is used, AT&T uses GSM which is the global standard with over 85% global market share. All bets are off with 4G LTE, which allows Verizon to overcome the CDMA issue.

If you travel, you almost always can get AT&T voice and most of the time data access worldwide. However, it comes at at cost that is sometimes staggering. AT&T offers some help here, they have global partners who have roaming agreements and if you pick a plan in advance for voice, text and data, you can save a wad of dough vs hoping for the best and paying the full freight. We have some amazing horror stories here, 10k phone bills for a few weeks of travel and use without pre-authorizing a plan with AT&T.

If you are in a country often, you are better to get an in-country phone, they can be rented from a group of providers who offer very reasonable plans. However, you won’t have your personal phone number and whatever you do, don’t call forward your mobile to the international number of your in-country phone.

Winner? AT&T Clearly the only international option.

General observations:
If you talk a bunch and you are in a strong AT&T market, you might be just fine with AT&T. But, if you move about, travel domestically and/or are on conference calls a bunch for work, Verizon is clearly the hands down winner. If you are spending money for some form of HotSpot, both AT&T and Verizon offer this via the iPhone 4, and both are pretty reliable, however Verizon wins in our extended testing. If you talk on the phone and need to check email, use an app that requires data like Google Maps, the web browser or email, AT&T is your only option on the iPhone 4.

Final conclusions:
Personally I have arrived at the conclusion I need both a Verizon and an AT&T iPhone 4, in the testing of both of these amazing mobile phones, I’ve grown used to having both and don’t know if I would be happy giving one or the other up, it’s a perfect duo. Another nice thing to having both, you can look something up on one, for example, a conference call number and ID code buried in a calendar item while using the other phone to make the call, often you can’t cut and paste the calendar data so it becomes a pain in the butt to flip to the calendar, only to get back to the phone app and forget the dialing information.

I know, this isn’t reasonable and it’s down right ridiculous to have both, yea, I get it. If I had to pick it comes down to this, what do you do more of, talking or typing? If you talk a bunch, Verizon is your choice, if you text and use data more and talk less, AT&T is your choice. All of this assuming you have both options for signal at your house and work locations.

The voice difference is significantly better on Verizon when it comes to not getting pissed off from continuous dropped calls, it used to be funny and now I am really a Verizon fan regarding the iPhone 4.

Motorola Atrix Update, finally it’s the phone we thought we bought…

By Troy Saxton-Getty

A few days ago ATT issued an over the air update to our Motorola Atrix phone, version 4.1.83, this update finally delivers on the Atrix promise and it is now the phone we read about on the brochure before purchase.

The Atrix is quickly becoming one of our favorite phones now thanks to this long overdue upgrade.

(Our Verizon iPhone 4 is still number ONE!)

What’s new?

Well, it is a 4G phone that could only upload at a fraction of 3G speed, that is now fixed. This made it almost useless as a HotSpot for Internet sharing let alone basic use really suffered.

In a testing, averaging 3 market areas, San Jose, San Francisco and San Diego we are seeing over 1320kbps upload speeds and well over 6400kbps sustained download with bursts going even faster.

Read more about the many other updated features and bug fixes at the link below:

http://www.motorola.com/staticfiles/Support/US-EN/Mobile%20Phones/ATRIX_4G/US-EN/Documents/StaticFiles/RN_Blur_Version.4.1.83.MB860.ATT.en.US.htm

HTC Thunderbolt for $130 USD, But there is a catch…
By Troy Saxton-Getty

If you go to Amazon and buy the Verizon Thunderbolt on contract between now and midnight pacific time Monday, you will get the phone for $130 USD. Engadget recently reported on this today with more detail.

This is amazing, just a few short weeks ago we paid nearly a cool grand for our test phone and accessories for dropSKIP.

Although you’ve heard us complain about the unreliable HotSpot mode, this phone is really a fantastic product and we are sure this issue will be resolved shortly.

If you have had EVO envy when someone breaks out that luscious 4.3 inch beautiful screen , but didn’t want to switch to Sprint, this is the phone to fill the EVO void…

The HTC Thunderbolt is basically useless as a 4G HotSpot, we’ve tested it in 4 major 4G market areas without any improvement in reliability. No wonder the free HotSpot promotion is underway, if I had to pay for this I would be pissed…..actually I am pissed, we traded in a perfectly good MyFi 3G for it… For the first few minutes it works, amazing speed, then it drops signal, we’ve read about all kinds of compliants about it not being able to step down from 4G to 3G during poor signal. This issue is much more than that.

We parked 25 feet from a new Verizon 4G LTE tower, started a ping to a Verizon IP address and within 30 seconds packet loss was close to 50%.

We locked the device into 3G mode and the reliability wasn’t any better… How ridiculous Verizon…..

Upgrading from your ATT 3G iPad to a new ATT 3G iPad
by Troy Saxton-Getty

If you were an early adopter of the iPad 3G, when you signed up before June 7th 2010 for your data plan,  you received an “unlimited” data plan option. Today you get an option for 250MB or 2GB and you pay more if you go over.

While 2GB of monthly data transfer is quite a bit for most iPad users, you most likely won’t even come close to that, but there is nothing like the freedom of feeling “unlimited” when it comes to data, it’s just one less thing to worry about when you install NetFlix or some other large data consuming application.

ATT grandfathered those early adopters to their unlimited plan after that plan did away with unlimited data and even when you upgrade to a new iPad ATT 3G,  you can take your unlimited data plan with you. Simply swap the SIM card from your original iPad 3G to your new iPad2 3G and you are all set.

The internet search for this will reveal all kinds of conflicting rumors, methods etc. Some of these warn against swapping the sim card, some have lengthy processes to follow, some have you calling ATT and even then, you might get two stories from the ATT rep.

Swap the sim card, make sure you have the user name and password that you originally registered your ATT 3G iPad with so you can go to the SETTINGS->CELLULAR DATA option and view account, you will see that the unlimited account information is still there.

After experiencing this challenge ourselves with our old and new 3G ATT test iPads, we called our Apple business support rep and he said to simply swap the sim cards, the IMEI number updating isn’t required but if you are worried about it, call 1800 331-0500 and they will gladly update their own records with your new IMEI number, this is like the devices serial number for the radio. (Apple laughed at me when I told them I read about having to call-in, he said and yes, if you do, they will take about 30 minutes of your day for no reason, except to update their own records.

So why is this important? Stream 5-7 movies or stream audio from Pandora for days on end and in a month’s billing cycle you will quickly run up against your 2GB limit.

Even if you don’t have the unlimited data plan and  you want to get a new ATT 3G iPad2, you can simply swap the sim cards before you activate the new sim card and your current plan is now on your new iPad. If you break your iPad and buy another, do the same thing.

HTC Thunderbolt: Frequent disconnects from Verizon 4G while using Mobile Hotspot
By Troy Saxton-Getty

I bought the HTC Thunderbolt 24 hours ago. I decided to swap out my MyFi 2200 which was dropping signal here and there and this phone could simply replace it with a 4G Hotspot mode which also steps down to 3G when needed. Since this was my primary reason to buy it, I was quick to find out about the frequent disconnects from 4G and Mobile Hotspot mode.

Ok, the HTC Thunderbolt is fantastic, long have I lived with EVO envy…. Finally, I have something better, so I thought…

HTC Thunderbolt

HTC Thunderbolt

At first, I thought it was possibly my location; the downtown financial district of San Francisco is a tough place for the competition to serve up even quality 3G. Let’s look at the issues; large building attenuation, lack of towers in the right places, horde’s of mobile voice and data users and so on, it is challenging for all 4 big US carriers . With that thought in mind, I went across town to multiple different areas with full signal and noticed I had the same problem.

I tried setting the Thunderbolt to forced 4G LTE only mode with the super secret diagnostic and options *#*#4636#*#* menu (Don’t tell anyone ;-) ), while it did stay connected a bit longer, it still recycled, dropped and reconnected, after 30-60 seconds and sometimes minutes between issues however, regularly enough to make the data mode almost useless for a hotspot.

So many different apps and tools struggle to recover from whacky connectivity that it actually increased my frustration to all new levels, almost as frustrating as AT&T dropped voice calls, but not quite. ;-)

This is clearly an issue with the new HTC Thunderbolt, in my humble opinion it’s during a step down at a reduction or loss of 4G signal, however the error recovery process fails and the phone goes stupid, sometimes requiring a total reboot. Locked in 4G LTE only mode, it drops and sometimes recovers and eventually it requires a reboot as well, just slightly better than multi-mode.

I wondered why the phone had a new shutdown option called “Restart”, which says “closes all apps and restarts the phone” on the descriptor.

Just like the good ole days of Microsoft…. I am glad I dropped nearly a cool phat grand on this phone and accessories since I didn’t want to extend my contract, I am even happier that I swapped out my MyFi 2200 3G Hotspot, it was far more reliable than the Thunderbolt Hotspot and now I have a non-operational MyFI 2200.

After some careful research and digging around, it is clear that I am not the only one having this problem, in fact, MSNBC.com has a video report on it, outlining how the phone gets “confused” and doesn’t recover from it very well. use this stories title and search, you will find many others already just days after its public debut.

HTC, why are you beta testing on us with this? I have a friend in QA there, I should call him and find out if this was a known/logged bug and they let it ship since they slipped on the original date…

Speedtest.net from my Macbook Air

Speedtest.net from my Macbook Air

Did I forget to mention this thing flies…. 4G LTE is unreal, better than most home and business high-speed internet… too bad it’s not WORKING reliably.

How frustrating!
http://www.dropSKIP.com ->; real gadget drabble and mashing…

If you have an iPhone4, you’ve probably noticed the great quality of the iPhone’s 5 megapixel camera, 720p HD video recording, with its great detail and color, along with the HD Retina display. Photos looks great on it! Though there will always be that photo that never looked great because of shaky hands, low-lighting, etc. The good news is there are huge amounts of apps on photo editing that I have used to drastically improve those photos, and share them between friends. My favorite app and one of the most popular called “Camera +” ($0.99) can show you how far the iPhone camera potential can go. You can use “anti-shake”, separate exposure and focus, along with being able to upload to: Facebook, Twitter, Picasa, Flickr, and of course, send through email. You can also edit the pictures for quick color temperature control, cropping, rotating, dramatic color effects, making your photos look very artistic.

If you want to go even further, try using apps like “Filterstorm” ($3.99), which is definitely a more advanced photo editing app. You can use the same tools that are on Photoshop like: curves, exposure, sharpness, white balance, rotate, adding borders, and there are even more details into more filters that are available.

These and many more apps really show the potential of photography on the iPhone4, where it becomes more of basic digital camera than a simple phone camera. I, as a digital photographer, really notice the quality difference when editing photos on computer applications like Photoshop, and have tested to see what an iPhone image zoomed in at 100% on Photoshop looks like, and well, the quality is exceptional for such a small device. You can’t compare it to a real professional camera such as ones by Nikon and Canon DSLRs, but if you’re really going for the photography aspect of a phone, the iPhone4 really has its potential!

When you get into the HD Video recording on the iPhone4, the story changes, the quality is much less. If you have recorded a well-lit outside video with an iPhone4 and have only viewed it on your phone’s screen, it’s deceiving. Thinking that this would keep me away from buying a separate video camera was wrong. When you view any of the videos on a computer screen or TV, the quality is very disappointing – grainy, loss of quality and sharpness, VERY shaky, audio is “okay”. So, while it says 720p HD, it’s true with the pixel amount, but the quality is just lame. If you’re outside on a sunny day and using a tripod, it will be good, but anything less than that is unexceptional to be called HD. One thing though, is that if you just keep the videos to be viewed on your phone, then it is perfectly fine, but I would recommend if you want a real HD camera, you can purchase a “Flip” cam, or a Sony “Bloggie”, which are inexpensive, portable, and produce great quality videos.

One thing that is a major PRO for the iPhone’s video camera is that you can upload, edit, and share the video almost anywhere! You can edit the video as a quick trim in the camera app, or for free can get this app called “Splice”, which allows you to upload separate music tracks from your music library, add transitions, text, add effects like slow-motion, speed-up, crop, and trim. Then export in HD still. You can also, after video is finished, upload right from the phone to YouTube or send through email. You can only upload to YouTube in HD on wi-fi only, if your on 3G it will only allow you to upload in standard quality. But the upload is simple and fast. If you have the FaceBook app, you can upload HD video on Wi-Fi or 3G, but if on 3G it will take an extended period of time, drain more battery, and eat-up your data plan. If you purchases Apple’s own “iMovie” app, the editing goes even further with more options like adding photos, video, music, sounds, transitions, animations, and pre-made animated graphics. You will also be able to upload to YouTube, Facebook, vimeo, CNNiReport, or save to iTunes to edit later in the Mac’s “iMovie” computer application when you next sync your phone!

So while the iPhone4′s HD video camera isn’t the greatest, it’s extremely handy, and the pictures look amazing! Here are some sample photos that I took on the iPhone and edited only on the iPhone!

So anyone with a smart phone will probably at some point (if you haven’t already), run into a restriction with an App that requires WiFi and won’t work over your carrier’s 3G connection. In fact, even the iTunes and the Apple App Store won’t let you download over 3G if the file size is too large and you will promptly get a message telling you to use WiFi. Worse yet, FaceTime, the video calling tool available on iPhone4, iPad 2 and even a Mac will not run over the iPhone4 or iPad 2′s native 3G connection by design due to an agreement to block it with their respective carrier. (For now)

So tonight we spent a few hours testing FaceTime from our iPhone4′s (both Verizon & ATT), from our iPad 2 and FaceTime on our Macbook Air, all connected over a group of different WiFi hotspot devices to get us around this restriction. (You can also use this method to download files/movies/Audio/Apps larger then they allow over native 3G, iTunes too)

We called with FaceTime over each device and each WiFi Hotspot as well as received FaceTime calls on each, hoping this would give us a good understanding of video and audio quality as well as an understanding of what worked and what didn’t.

We tested the WiFi devices below in HotSpot Mode (meaning you can connect any WiFi device to them over WiFi only and these devices use 3G or 4G to connect you to the internet: (some of these devices will also let you connect to them via USB or Bluetooth for internet access, for this test, we used them all in WiFi mode)

iPhone4 (Verizon) in 3G Hotspot mode
iPhone4 (ATT) in 3G Hotspot mode (requires iOS 4.3)
MyFi 3G (Verizon) (5 connection dedicated Hotspot)
Atrix 4G (ATT) running in 4G Hotspot mode
Xoom Tablet 3G (Verizon) running in 3G Hotspot mode
(MyFi 4G Overdrive (Sprint) is traveling in Gill’s bag, so no testing with it, I suspect it will work just fine)

If we turned off the native 3G on the iPhone4 and iPad2 and connected to any home WiFi connection, FaceTime worked, of course it did, that is how it was meant to work, over your home WiFi and not over ATT or Verizon 3G/4G natively.

So we did exactly that, but turned off the home/office WiFi and made each device connect over each hotspot list above, FaceTime worked and connected every time, the video quality was decent considering the reduced connection speed of 3G/4G over home/work WiFi.

If you want to use FaceTime on the road, you need two devices, one for FaceTime the other to act as the WiFi Hotspot… It seems completely stupid to us or actually, maybe it is brilliant on their part, we haven’t really figured that part out.

Oh, did I mention, you can go iPhone4 to iPhone4 using your native 3G (same device) with the latest version of Skype with video, you can also go to/from a PC or MAC and iPhone4 as well, pretty flawlessly…

Tell me, if FaceTime won’t connect over your native 3G on iPhone4 or iPad2 and Skype will, why are we trying to use FaceTime? Thank you Skype! We hear an Android Skype version with video is coming soon too! Click here for more information on Skype Video for the iPhone4:

http://www.skype.com/intl/en-us/get-skype/on-your-mobile/download/iphone-for-skype/

We have been testing the Motorola DroidX and the HTC Droid Incredible since their launch last year. These two phones are both fantastic even by today’s standards. There have been several next generation smartphones released that have some faster processors and some newer features, but ITRW (in the real world) these phones can still hold their own and you can buy one for a fraction of the price the latest models cost.

DroidX & Droid Incredible

DroidX & Droid Incredible

At dropSKIP, we are fans of the HTC Sense UI interface add-on that comes on the HTC Android devices, so much so that we found some great aftermarket add-ons for the Motorola Android phones which allow them to mimic the Sense UI, it is not the same, but some of the stuff, mainly the on-screen clock and weather are very similar. Just in case you wondered how the Motorola DroidX looks like HTC Sense UI, (See above photo) we used the add-on product called Beautiful Widgets.

http://levelupstudio.com/beautifulwidgets

After several months of using both the DroidX and the Droid Incredible we must say, these really are fantastic phones, still. The Droid Incredible has a smaller but much brighter screen at 3.7 inch diagonal and is one of the first phones to use the AMOLED technology, brighter, vibrant color, really clear, super high contrast ratios. The downside of AMOLED is bright sunlight viewing.  The DroidX has a big 4.3 inch TFT screen, although the colors and black levels aren’t nearly as nice as the Droid Incredible, the TFT screen was easily viewable outside in bright sunlight. Don’t get me wrong, both work well outside, just the TFT has an advantage in bright sunlight. The AMOLED screen of the Incredible is the closest thing to an iPhone Retina display in terms of clarity and is beautiful.

The DroidX is a bigger phone, (see photo) it also weighs a bit more and the case is metal vs. the Incredible’s plastic case, both are very nicely built and are tough but the DroidX feels more solid.

We dropSKIP’d both units 3 times from 4.5 feet and then skipped them across the floor over 10 feet. On both phones the battery door came off once. These are about the toughest phones on the market today, even vs. the latest generations. We’ve used these phones everyday for nearly 8 months, they still look almost brand new and they’ve hit the ground many times over.

DroidX earned a dropSKIP rating of 39/100

Droid Incredible earned a dropSKIP rating of 37/100

For reference, iPhone4′s have a dropSKIP rating of 33/100

Both units come with 8MP (Megapixel) cameras with flash, both can shoot 720P video. (thanks to the upgrade late last year on the Incredible) The DroidX has an external camera button on the side of the case for “instamatic” type shooting and the Incredible does not.

The DroidX has 4 mechanical buttons and the Droid Incredible has 4 pressure buttons on the bottom edge of the glass for the classic Android functions.

Both units run Android 2.2.x (Froyo)

Both units come with 8GB (Gigabytes) of internal storage and you can add up to a 32GB microSD card. The DroidX had a 16GB card included, the Incredible had only a 2GB included. (Different promotions at different resellers may change the included memory card. If you plan on storing lots of music, video and photos, just max the unit out with a 32GB card.

The HTC Droid Incredible comes with a 1GHz Snapdragon CPU

The Motorola DroidX comes with a 1GHz OMAP 3630 CPU and a dedicated SFX530 GPU.

We use the Quadrant benchmark tool for testing processor, memory, graphics and I/O speeds and the DroidX scored a 1324 and the Incredible a 527.

Although both phones still feel very zippy by modern standards, (yes, nearly 8 months has gone by since these phones originally shipped) the DroidX scored higher due to the graphics processor. In every day use, you will have trouble seeing much of a difference.

The HTC Sense UI interface really makes the Incredible a pretty awesome user experience. The included apps and UI nuances are first class. Out of the box the Incredible is setup nicely. The DroidX falls down here, if you want anything close, you have to download some add-on widgets but even then, it’s not the same. The Motorola Blur interface is a few generations behind Sense UI in terms of functionality. We see the Blur interface catching up slowly on newer phones but HTC keeps pushing ahead as well.

Long document typing clearly goes to the DroidX, the native keyboard is easier to type lengthy documents on it, requiring less special key combinations for punctuation and other special characters whereas, the Sense UI interface keyboard isn’t nearly as easy to work with and takes  more practice. On our typing speed test the DroidX wins with two different tests being completed in half the time as it took on the Droid Incredible. (Aftermarket keyboard layouts can easily be added to the unit to solve this)

In our “left in the car” heat test, we were able to get both phones to drop to reduced functionality, a mode that tries to save the phone electronics from overheating due to extreme sunlight/heat. Both units recovered from the overheat state quickly but the DroidX appears to have permanent headset speaker damage from the overheat. Given the fact that this unit can be mounted in the window with a Motorola window suction mount for GPS use, we hope this was a one-off issue. Unfortunately we don’t have a second phone to test this again and its pretty cold outside!

Both of these phones are so evenly matched, it really comes down to personal preference on what works best for you, larger or smaller, brighter or softer? Outside sunlight? They are both very durable, batteries work well, even 8 months into our extended use, we are still getting almost the same battery life as when they were new.

Currently you can get the Droid Incredible from Verizon on a 2 year contract deal for $99 USD and the DroidX is $149 USD. If you look around online you can get them for even less and refurbished options are also available from Verizon dropping the prices to sub $50 dollars in their new “Certified Pre-owned devices” area on their website.

When the HTC HD7 shipped back in early November 2010, I was excited to see something hardware comparable to the HTC EVO 4G.  Although they are both made by the same manufacturer, they are very different in many ways but similar in some as well. For example, the EVO has a better camera, 8MP vs. HD7′s 5MP, the screens are both 4.3″ displays, the EVO presents 65k color vs. HD7′s 16 million. The EVO is exclusive to SPRINT running Android 2.2 and the HD7 runs the Microsoft Windows Mobile 7 operating system. For more on this, Craig Gillispie at SMARTPHONE ENVY has a fantastic article:  http://www.smartphoneenvy.com/featured/face-off-htc-hd7-vs-htc-evo-4g/.  These guys write great stuff on “Face Off’s of one phone vs. another”, check them out!

Our reviews are about longer term use ITRW (in the real-world), we basically port our personal and professional lives over to the device and use it in our day-to-day regiment.

I have spent years buying older Windows mobile phones only to come back to the conclusion that the experience of trying to recreate the “Big” Windows environment was just a stupid thing to try to do, about the same as Windows on a TABLET PC.

Windows Mobile 7 however is an entirely different experience, it is simple, elegant and very well designed, although it’s considered to be version 7, it is nothing like v6.5 or earlier. It is a clean slate and it’s lovely.

Over the course of the next few articles I will drill into what I really like, what’s so-so and what still needs improvement.

Windows Mobile 7 starts off with a simple summary screen, showing appointments, new email, missed calls, signal, battery etc.

Locked Screen View

Locked Screen View

A quick flick-drag of the finger upward and you’re in. (if you have a screen lock password, flick-drag and then enter the code and tap OK)

Windows Mobile 7 - Main Screen

Windows Mobile 7 - Main Screen

The first thing you are presented with are these simple TILES – email, text, phone and other tile icons representing some of your apps, you can modify their order very easily, remove or add by simply holding your finger on one for a second then it breaks from the pack and you can change that specific one and, of course, repeat this until you are happy with what you have for your initial TILE organization. It is very simple.

Windows Mobile 7 - Apps screen

Windows Mobile 7 - Apps screen

If you want to get to more apps than what you have on the tile screen, you can press the Right Arrow on the upper right side or simply drag-swipe your finger from right to left and you will see the All-Apps screen cleverly slip in from the right.  The interesting thing here, this is pretty much the main way to navigate around the phone, left, right, up and down, a finger drag-swipe motion makes it very simple.

If I drag-swipe back to the tile screen and click an email icon you enter the email app based on the specific email account for that tile, e.g. Yahoo Mail, GMail and so on. If you use corporate email on an Microsoft Exchange Server, the ActiveSync setup is a snap, and it is very solid. On our HD7 we have 9 email accounts setup ranging from Exchange, IMAP, POP and some cloud service types as well. They all just work, no drama. Another key point, corporate calendar syncing is very stable (I know, it’s Microsoft to Microsoft). How refreshing to see a nearly flawless calendar & contact sync.

Email account view

Email account view

One of the things that really sticks out nicely with Mobile Windows 7 is the use of great fonts, larger, very readable, contrast is great, really a very usable display when you are bouncing around on a bus, walking, riding in a car, etc. My initial thought was the colors seemed bland, though once you spend time using it you will clearly see why it is easy on the eye, quick to view and it just works. You will also see a reverse use of black backgrounds and white larger text as well. A Themes option in setup allows to change the primary color scheme, yeah, for you PINK fans, it actually looks pretty cool.

HD7 Kickstand

HD7 Kickstand

Like the EVO, the HD7 enjoys a very similar “Kickstand”, I thought this was a flimsy gimmicky thing but after having used the phone for a while, you really get the idea, it works for so many different things and it is rock solid. I wish this idea would show up on some of my other favorite handsets or cases!

To date, the best NetFlix experience on a small device has to go hands down to the HD7.  NetFlix works great and it is very viewable for short content as well as feature-length movies, you can plug-in headphones or you can just prop it up on the desk and the internal speakers are solid enough for a movie break with speakers on both sides, in stereo.

HD7-NetFlix

HD7-NetFlix

Well, that should get us started for HD7 and Windows Mobile 7 extended use kick-off.  Going forward, I will comment on specific things that work well or really need improvement and, so far, I really don’t want to admit it (as an Android and iPhone/iPad fan), the new Microsoft Windows Mobile 7 OS is fantastic, it is downright a contender and in some ways I like it better than the other “big” two.

If you are not a techie (even techies like it), but want a solid, easy, reliable and great phone experience, you should strongly consider Windows Mobile 7, seriously. The Zune media/content market is very nice. The Microsoft Apps Store experience is great, it’s new, it doesn’t have the developer following of the Apple Apps Store, but it is growing quickly.

I do have an equivalent app on the HD7/Win7 phone for all of the most used apps I have on my  Android and iPhone rigs, in fact, some of them are the same app from the same developer, the Win7 App Store is growing quickly so I am not too worried here.

If you are confused on what is the best choice for you, hit your local phone store and spend some time looking at all of them, I suspect you will find the Windows Mobile 7 operating system on a nice phone like the HD7 a great choice.