Verizon Droid Incredible, indeed it is
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While it's been disappointing to learn that carrying around two smart phones does not make a guy extra smart, I am incredibly happy about owning that Verizon Droid Incredible at left. It's not a phone I'd recommend to everyone -- and Android marine apps certainly aren't much yet -- but given what I want from it, and where I live, the Incredible makes that iPhone 3GS seem feeble and limited. I feel like I just got out of Apple/AT&T jail, and I'm shaking my head because I liked it in there! Let's begin with the built-in GPS and motion sensors...
I'm not going to go on and on about how good the Incredible's hardware and software is, though I could! Reviewers at Engadget and PCMag.com have already done a fine job of breaking down the details. And I will admit that it's quite unfair to compare a brand new phone to the one-year-old 3GS, given how red hot smart phone competition is. I'm sure the much anticipated iPhone 4G/HD, along with the 4.0 OS, will take care of numerous shortcomings. But Apple and Google are on different paths, and right now I'm liking Android chaos over iSimplicity. Yes, Task Killer has become one of my essential apps (to conserve the battery), and, yes, I did crack my wife up when she called as I was trying a bluetooth headset with Google street navigation and an podcast player simultaneously. (It was working perfectly, the podcast fading out when robotic voice directions came up, and it might have cut both out to answer the call except that somehow another audio app had opened itself...she found me dazed and confused.)
At any rate, a very big deal for me is that Verizon 3G beats the hell out of the AT&T Edge service available around here, and actually seems much faster on the Incredible than any iPhone 3G I've experienced while traveling. I can't tell the difference between it and the DSL WiFi I can also tap at Panbo HQ. And tethering the Incredible with a laptop via USB took me all of ten minutes, without "jail breaking" (or "rooting" as it's called in Android world). I used EasyTether, but there are choices, and I was even able to download the needed PC software to the phone and then over to the laptop -- so I could set this up a PC without another form of Internet access -- because Android lets you do stuff like that. And check out the laptop speed I got while tethered to Verizon 3G, which corresponds to what I've been seeing on the phone. This means that a $30/month data plan is going to let us be online in style while cruising the Maine coast this season, and that's gold. I do hope that marine apps developers get cooking on Anroid, but I already love this phone.
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Incidentally, Active Captain noted yesterday that it's working with a developer on a full featured Android app, but that it may take a "season or two"...damn. Meanwhile Navimatic's AC implementation for iPhone and iPad just released, and is looking good.
http://www.activecaptain.com/newsletters/2010-05-18.php