Motorola Droid Will Run Gameloft Games

Huge win for the Motorola Droid

It was pretty much sure that Gameloft wouldn’t support our beloved Motorola Droid, but the Apple iPhone partner promises great games for the Droid.

Gameloft, famous for developing fantastic downloadable video games, plans to launch HD games on the Motorola Droid.

Gameloft states that the arrival of this next generation of phones makes it possible to bring High Definition games to smart phones. Consumers will benefit from a top quality gaming experience, says Gonzague de Vallois, vice-president of Publishing at Gameloft.Win A Motorola Droid

Gameloft will still support older Android phones with titles like Assassin’s Creed. You can download these games at the Android Marketplace and Gameloft internet sites. For Android users this means a even bigger catalogue of games.

What is especially cool is the fact that with licenses of a range of top games Motorola Droid users get the chance to play mobile games developed by one of Apple’s key partners.

Funny is that up to now it sounded like Gameloft would be giving up on the Android. Now it looks like Gameloft is really looking forward to take advantage of the next-generation Android phones. Great news for the Android camp.

Verizon Wireless with all its effort to steal potential iPhone 3GS buyers to the Motorola Droid also gets tons of value out of the Gameloft support.

Happy times for the Droid and the whole Android camp.

Keep it up!

Google’s Droid Personal Review

I picked up the Droid phone a few days ago. My old phone was pretty crappy and was having some “problems” after 2 years.

What I really like about Verizon is that they don’t try to keep a stranglehold over their phones. They have a fantastic network (yes, it’s the truth) and now good phones too. The Verizon Droid is running Google’s new version of the Android operating system (Android 2.0).

The Droid has a huge screen which can be great for watching videos, websites and other media. With 16 GB of memory you have space enough.

Now with the touch screen of the Motorola Droid phone there is a small flaw. It’s a single touch and not a multi touch like the iPhone. I personally don’t mind but I heard some people complaining about it. I’ve never owned a phone with a touchscreen before, and it’s taking getting used to, but it’s nice and handles taps and such responsively.

The slide-out keyboard is somewhat “weird”. The 4-way pad gets in the way with typing which is kind of annoying. I like the on-screen keyboard alot you have to get used to it at first but then… I was thinking that they should make a version of the Droid phone with out the slide-out keyboard. A thinner version.

All that said, the keyboard is really nice when playing Super Mario on an NES emulator. Which brings me to software.

I really like Android, except when it bugs the hell out of me. I love the customization options, the Google integration and syncing, the general setup and style, and think we’re going to see Android phones continue to rise in popularity as Windows Mobile phones dwindle. Unlike the iPhone, you can add widgets (weather, calendars, battery info, FaceBook notifications, etc) to the home screens of the Motorola Droid. You can move everything around, make folders for icons, change the background, and so on. I also like the general setup – the slide-up application drawer, the slide-down notification drawer, and so on.

Likewise, in terms of openness, the Android Marketplace has applications the iPhone Apps Store will never ever, ever allow. I’ve downloaded NES emulators, replacement text messaging programs, replacement video programs, custom widgets, and so on. Not only that, but when you download something like a replacement text messaging program, the OS will ask you if you’d like to use it instead of the built-in text messaging program. That’s how interested Google is in letting you customize the phone.

Some not so great things… By default, almost all phones (this one included) have start up noises, shut down noises, new email noises, noises to let you know there haven’t been any noises in a while… Unlike Windows Mobile, the Droid hasn’t a central place to turn all these noises off – they’re on a per-application basis. That’d be fine, and I’ve managed to turn most of them off, except some of them can’t be turned off. I can’t turn off the “I’M TURNING ON!” noise, or the “I’VE BEEN CONNECTED TO A USB CABLE!” noise, to name the two that have been annoying me the most. And, because my notification noise is on the SD card – which doesn’t activate until the OS is fully booted – the turning-on noise is an obnoxious default noise, not the custom noise I’ve specified.

Likewise, while it is possible to text multiple people, you can’t simply go through and check a bunch of contacts to text ‘em all. Or access the Contacts screen from within a text message, to choose more people. You can type a name to find someone, but if you’re not sure who else you want to text and want to just look through your contacts, you’re SOL. Most of my other complaints are similar – odd interface quirks that seem not to have been thought out.

To be continued…

Motorola Droid Review

Since its recent release, the device that many are hoping to be the “iPhone killer,” the Motorola Droid, has been getting some great reviews in the last few days. If you haven’t heard about it through Motorola’s expensive ad-campaign for the Droid, the Droid phone is the newest smart phone from Motorola (on Verizion), and it is has Google’s newest Android 2.0 software. Grab your Google phoneApple’s iPhone has surely set the standard of what smart phones should do but if anyone can de-throne them, we’d put our money on Google. I am annoyed by Apple anyways so I think it really is time for a change. Let’s check out what the Droid has is store for us.

The first thing that many hands on reviews of the device have reported is that it instantly feels very fast and smooth. Browsing menus and switching between applications is incredibly fast, and it’s clear that the new Google Android 2.0 OS is a big step up from its predecessors. In combination with its way better processor, the Droid’s huge 3.7-inch display, containing over 400,000 pixels, makes web browsing and watching videos easier than it has ever been. The impressive screen also displays impressive pictures from the Droids 5 mega-pixel camera, which has flash, zoom, and auto-focus. The Droid also records video of incredible quality.

Because the Motorola Droid runs Google’s Android 2.0 software, it comes with Google Maps and Google’s navigation, built in and for free. The voice guided navigation looks really impressive and should definitely save you from the need to buy a stand-alone navi system. Motorola is offering a suction-cup window cradle for the Droid, which contains magnets allowing the Droid to automatically convert to Navigation Mode.

Another really sweet accessory for the Motorola Droid is the alarm clock cradle. When you insert the Droid into the cradle, the units combine to form a really nice looking alarm clock. If you’re like me, you use your phone as your alarm clock anyway, so this just makes it easier and more stylish. To be honest this is my favourite feature although it’s simple.

The Droid also includes a 550MHz Texas Instruments OMAP3430 processor, separate PowerVR GPU, 256MB of RAM, CDMA Rev A., Wi-Fi, GPS, a digital magnetometer, accelerometer, proximity sensors, a 5 megapixel autofocus camera with dual-LED flash, notification LED, four touch-sensitive navigation buttons, a slide-out full QWERTY keyboard, 3.5mm headset jack, and a microUSB port.

Was Droid worth the wait?

I guess the secret in smartphone business is patience. Patience is what makes a top-selling phone — the patience not to jump in until you’ve managed to couple great software with great hardware. In this article we will discover if the Droid has it all. Consider Apple, which made the insane figure of $1.67 billion last quarter. At a high level, to the uninformed, it would seem like Apple is nothing more than a design house that can order components. It rarely uses hardware that isn’t available to its competitors, yet Apple is able to post incredible earnings in a recession. Instead of relying on exclusive components to give it an advantage, Apple makes good hardware choices and couples it with solid design and software development. Speed up your PC

Now the Motorola Droid smartphone shows us Motorola’s patience and great selection of hardware and software could pay off well, too. The new Droid phone is the first Android phone built with seemingly good hardware.

Every previous Android phone on the market had horrible hardware, let’s say not that good. What do you pair a slow hardware with? Slow graphics, of course, which again, has plagued every single Android phone on the market thus far.

To be fair, the first versions of the Android OS didn’t natively support anything but these slow platforms. But that’s also where Motorola’s been smart. It waited patiently for the new 2.0 release of Google’s Android platform, a platform that supports a nifty little chip from Texas Instruments. It’s the same chip that’s in the Palm Pre, and comparable to what’s in the iPhone 3GS. If the older Android phones used something akin to a modern day 486, the Droid uses a modern day Pentium. We’re not quite bleeding edge yet, but we’re getting there. It’s all good.

Smartphones are PCs, just slower and smaller. That’s not meant to be a controversial statement, it’s just the truth. A modern day PC is made up of a general purpose processor (that Intel processor that all those rockstars are talking about), a graphics processor (that GPU NVIDIA keeps saying is going to take over the world), a chipset to get the two to talk, some memory/storage and a basketful of other chips that enable things like USB, Bluetooth and WiFi. A modern day smartphone is made up of the same components, it’s just that Intel doesn’t make the CPU, NVIDIA doesn’t make the GPU, and many of these processors are integrated onto a single chip. So the hardware is simply not the best to say atleast.

Now, Motorola didn’t do anything special to make the new hardware work. Google and Texas Instruments did everything there. Motorola simply aligned its schedule with the Android 2.0 release and remained patient while its competitors sold slow Android phones. Motorola is the first, but definitely not the last.

I will say that my two biggest issues with the first generation of Android phones were the lack of multitouch gestures and poor performance. With phones like the Droid using (more) modern hardware, we’ll finally get to fixing the performance complaint. Better performance means a more attractive Android platform, which means better competition for Windows Mobile, iPhone OS and Web OS based smartphones. Which in the end keeps everyone fighting and innovation churning. Sweet. Cheaper phones for us customers. W00t!