T-Mobile, Google and High Tech Computer (HTC) unveiled the highly anticipated Android phone in New York on Tuesday, and I got a chance to try out the new handset at HTC's office in Taipei.
The applications on board are by far the coolest feature of the handset, especially Google Maps Street View, which on the handset, allows a person to view a snapshot of an entire street scene at any of several U.S. cities.
I chose 42nd street in New York City at the Avenue of the Americas from Google Maps, and once the information downloaded from Chunghwa Telecom's mobile network, I was able to view the street on the handset's screen. It's cool.
There are three ways to navigate a street scene with T-Mobile's G1, or the 'Dream' as HTC calls it.
The funnest was to hit the "compass" function on the handset and move it around by hand. You pan the G1 up and view the screen as if it's the LCD viewfinder on a digital camera, and you're looking at building tops or into trees. Pan down and you can see if anyone dropped some coins on the street. Pan around for an entire 360 degree view of the street from where you are, including taxis, buildings, or a guy walking down the street eating a sandwich.
I can't think of any useful reasons to use Street View -- Google Maps is enough to get you where you want to go -- but it sure is fun.
The other two ways to navigate on Street View are by using the touchscreen to look around or the trackball at the bottom of the phone.
Google is still expanding the Street View database to include more cities.
The applications aspect of the G1 may make it one of the most expandable handsets around. You can already find fun and useful programs from Android, many of them free. And applications are easy to find and download.
An icon on the desktop of the handset sends you right to an Android apps page, where applications roll across a panel at the top of the screen. You can use your thumb on the touchscreen to make the panel move left or right for more choices and then tap an app's icon to choose it.
I picked ShopSavvy because the demonstration of it looked fun and I wanted to see it in actual use.
Bargain hunters will love this program.
ShopSavvy turns the G1's on-board 3-megapixel camera into a price tag scanner. It starts to scan immediately when ShopSavvy is on, no need to snap a photo or anything. Just run a red line in the middle of the viewfinder over a barcode and it scans the information.
It took me a few tries to scan the barcode of the book, 'Execution' by Larry Bossidy, which was one of the few things at HTC's office with a barcode. But once I got it, it only took several seconds to navigate to a site with a book review and other information, as well as suggestions on where to buy. It costs US$21 new at eCampus.com, or $2.50 used at Half.com, while the retail price listed inside the cover of the book itself was $27.50.
The ShopSavvy application only took about 40 seconds to download. I also downloaded Pac-Man, which took about 33 seconds.
The handset itself feels good, solidly built and with beautiful screen quality. Even when you flip up the screen to reveal the QWERTY keyboard below, it's quick and smooth in a way you can tell it won't break easily.
Flipping up the screen, by the way, is the only way to turn the view on the handset screen sideways. Unlike other handsets that turn the screen view sideways when the handset is held










Comments
Really cool ya. Seems to be way ahead of the Windows mobile platform. I would love to have one.
Oh I so want one but will just admire from afar....I really dislike NextG in Australia....we miss out on all the cool phones :(
I like the thought that has gone into making it simple. I am a qwerty fan on a mobile and it reads like a dream. Since being through a few qwerty/palm style phones...the rubbery feel is so much easier to use.
Please.....there be a lock on the touch screen.....always overlooked...but stops you accidentally "clicking" something when the phone is in your bag.
I wonder if the creators of ShopSavvy know that they are in violation of NeoMedia's patents?
http://neom.com/13.html
Streetstylz knows good and well Big in Japan is NOT in violation of any patents. Here is more about his smear campaign against ShopSavvy: http://www.biggu.com/2008/10/01/barcode-ip-landscape/
NeoMedia has a patent that covers this technology
Patent #6,651,053 — Interactive system for investigating products on a network
An interactive search system for use with a global computer network, e.g., the Internet, using a search identifying barcode to rapidly and effectively obtain a supply of related information for presentation to a user. A computer, either landline based or mobile, may be used to input a UPC code, taken from a package or advertisement or prestored in the computer, to an implementing server on the network. The server contains a database of product and manufacturer identifying UPC codes and uses the input UPC code and the database to identify the manufacturer and is programmed to then perform a search of the network to locate sites relating to or operated by the manufacturer. Also, the server may search the network on a product basis to locate other sites containing the UPC under search. Using “parsing” technology, the server “pulls out” the product description, transmits it to and places it in a random access memory (RAM) or storage of the computer, and proceeds to perform further searching relying on the product description to uncover relevant information. Accordingly, using a single input, a collection of product-related and manufacturer information is quickly assembled in the computer available for a user’s consideration all at once at any time.
What Streetstylz fails to mention is that this patent is currently under review after being challenged by the EFF.
http://deancollinsblog.blogspot.com/2008/07/us-patent-office-rejects-all...
Since then Neomedia has refiled and it's up to the USPTO to re-evaluate so it may just all go away.... or not - but for the moment it's not a 'valid' patent.
Cheers,
Dean Collins
www.Cognation.net
Dean you are an idiot
Patent #6,651,053 is NOT under review by the USPTO.
The '048 patent is the one under review ....... NOT the '053 patent.
LOL
Dean, you have the wrong patent.
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