Everybody in Silicon Valley seems to have an odd love affair with the iPhone and while it is an impressive product I couldn’t resist the opportunity to be a bit different and buy myself the much derided G1 (aka Google Phone) by T-Mobile. One month later I am a tad jealous of the strange love affair people have with their iPhone. The instant reviewers of the blogosphere quickly panned the G1 — while at times I felt like jumping I felt like I needed to make the G1 part of my life for more then a few hours or even days. Here is what I found:
G1 Hardware: Overall lacks polish and fit n’ finish I would expect from a $150+ device.
- Keyboard: Angled section forces right thumb into uncomfortable position. The keys themselves are
- Thickness: If you miss phones from 1996 you’ll like the thickness of the G1.
- Power recharge input : Flimsy plastic cover cap. Why does the most used input require a plastic cover?
- Keyboard slider arm: Arm that slides the keyboard open/close position is very flimsy piece of plastic. When expanding/collapsing the arm its snap is anything but gentle, and I am fairly certain that in a matter of months it will fly off its hinges.
- Battery: Rarely make it through a full day when my usage is relatively intense — multiple phone calls, checking email, and browsing the web. For an enterprise user used to the battery life of a Blackberry battery this will prove unusable for most.
- Buttons: Too many. I constantly confuse the Home and Back button — especially when I am working in landscape mode.
- Track ball: Too small and sensitive — when browsing the trackball is the cause of many erroneous clicks and movements.
- Pull-out tray: I suspect many users will never discover all the apps. Opening the tray requires a cumbersome select and pull motion – for all the value that sits within this tray one would expect easier and more natural access.
- Menu Button: Too many applications require constant use of the Menu button — this is partially poor design on the part of the Apps, but I find myself engaging this button constantly when I am in Browser, Mail, etc. These actions should appear/disappear when needed. For example, upon reaching the bottom of a web-page display a “Bookmark” action.
- Applications: Why do I need to load sixty applications to delete one. If there is an easier way that somebody is aware of please do tell.
- Search Apps: Nearly impossible to discover how to search all your apps — with the tray open you just start typing — but it took me a few weeks to discover this feature. After the user has added say 40 apps why not expose a search box that can be easily dismissed by the user or provide a gentle hint once the user has a certain number of apps.
- Notifications: Little icons appear when an email arrives, app download completes, etc. The icons themselves are usually useless — they don’t convey the type of notification they are supposed to represent. Additionally, it seems like anytime anything happens a notification appears — I really don’t care that it finished downloading an App. Finally, opening the notification tray requires very nimble fingers.
- Clock: Why by default does the home screen include a clock that takes up half the screen real-estate when their a clock in the upper right hand corner that is perfectly fine. I don’t get it.
- Browser: One of the bigger disappointments of the device. Mistakes gestures as simple as scroll and zoom. Search box and Address Box are distinct entities when they should be tightly integrated (see Chrome for a good start). Finally, exclusive search provider — in some markets Yahoo! is actually superior to Google and
- Mail: Gmail should place the Reply and Reply All button in the Menu option as otherwise it forces you to scroll through the entire email to simply hit Reply.
- Early start is disappointing, but withhold judgement until they have broader reach and Google providers a monetization solution.
- App quality is extremely poor: I have uninstalled 80% of the apps as they were utter crap.
- Limited selection: I am begging for something interesting— how about the Wall Street Journal Reader (like the one for Blackberry)