While the release of G1 is just days away, the tech world should
answer to a touch question: is the new device better than the “wonder kid of
the past year, Apple’s iPhone?
However, there is some resemblance between the two devices,
but the G1 is a departure from the iPhone in significant ways.
The G1 is designed almost from the ground up to run
applications - Google's apps and those created by third-party developers. Of
course, Google will have the lion's share of applications ready upon the
phone's release - everything from GMail to Google Maps to the growing number of
office applications that Google offers in its Google Docs suite of programs.
Accordingly, the G1 comes with a keyboard - with traditional
key locations - that's larger than just about any other keyboard supplied on a
wireless phone today. The slide-out keyboard is hidden under the phone's LCD
when not in use. The keyboard will come as a pleasant surprise to those who
have never quite grown accustomed to "virtual" keyboards provided on
some phone, such as Apple's iPhone.
That keyboard could be put to good use by what very well may
be the biggest news about the G1 - its open source operating system, dubbed
Android, for which any developer with the necessary know-how can write
applications. Contrast this with Apple's typically proprietary approach with
its iPhone operating system, and you just might be tempted to recall the
thumping that Apple received from IBM-compatible computers many years ago when
Apple insisted on keeping third parties from developing hardware and software
that were compatible with its computers.
Google's approach with Android will undoubtedly result in a
flood of applications for its new G1. The downside is that, because Google has
little control over third-party developers, the quality of those applications
will be variable. Nevertheless, those who already use Google's current
applications will be pleased to see how well they operate on the G1. Google
Maps on the G1, for example, is a wonder to behold.
While the G1's focus on applications suggests a device made
for keyboard mavens, fans of touch screens won't be disappointed. The G1's LCD
is a touch-screen that you can use to navigate and use many applications. The
keyboard is often entirely optional.
In terms of design, the G1 is comparable in size to Apple's
iPhone - although the G1 is a bit taller and thicker. The G1 feels arguably a
bit flimsier than the iPhone, more plasticky. The Android interface is
contemporary-looking and attractive - much more like a miniature Windows-style
desktop than the iPhone's unique, highly tactile interface that seeks to become
an extension of your natural ability to select drag, and adjust things with
your hands.
Like the iPhone, the G1 offers a full array of features that
one expects of a cutting-edge wireless phone today: Wi-Fi, a Web browser, music
player, integrated digital camera, games, numerous applications, GPS, and
e-mail. The G1's digital camera, notably, is 3.2 megapixels, while the iPhone's
is only 2 megapixels.
There are areas in which the G1 simply does not provide as
much as the iPhone, however. The G1's battery life, unfortunately, is only
about 130 hours standby, while the iPhone's is 300 hours, and base memory of
the G1 is 1 gigabyte (1 GB), while the iPhone's is 8 GB. The G1's memory can be
expanded to 8 GB, while the iPhone's can be expanded to 16. The G1 also does
not have streaming video capabilities, unlike the iPhone, although you can get
YouTube on the G1.
The G1 also has no PC synching capability. Instead, Google
expects you to synchronise your contacts and calendars through the Web. This
will be a major shortcoming to those who are tied to Microsoft Exchange servers
- that is, the Outlook e-mail and contact management program - at work. Apple's
iPhone, by contrast, is capable of synchronising with Outlook, with the
addition of a free software update. G1 users can synchronise with Google's own
e-mail service, GMail, but frankly there are not many offices that rely upon
GMail as a primary e-mail carrier.
Oddly, the G1 also lacks a headphone jack. Instead, you'll
need to use the single USB jack on the phone to plug in either a special USB
headset or enlist the help of a USB to 3.5mm adapter in order to use
conventional headphones. To make matters worse, the G1's only USB port is also
used for power, audio, and USB synching. Needless to say, the G1 won't be a
plug-and-play replacement for your iPod or other mobile media player.
The G1, in short, will appeal to gadget freaks and
technology warriors. Those who want a product that just works might want to
place their bets on Apple's tightly-controlled iPhone.