Archive for the ‘Opinion’ Category

Angus’ Week

Saturday, January 23rd, 2010

It’s not been long since my last post, but that was late so this one is on time and it’s been another exciting week in the world of Sony Ericsson! We had the financial results for 2009, Vivaz and some confusion over the X10. We all knew about Kurara of course, but it was nice to finally see it made official, the name though … Vivaz? Sounds a bit like a character from a Spanish soap opera or maybe a washing powder. Will you be taking the Vivaz Doorstep Challenge?

The X10 was also causing a bit of head scratching in some circles with the camera and proximity sensor apparently missing (or covered up) on the Japanese version. So what’s the script? I don’t know, but I have a theory … cost cutting! Sony Ericsson have been trying to save some money recently and so they’ve decided to remove these two features. The forward facing camera won’t be replaced by anything; in a ground breaking piece of market research Sony Ericsson have discovered that no one really uses video calling and they’re just hoping no one actually notices the camera is missing. As for the proximity sensor that will be replaced by a small pin that stabs you when the phone gets close to your face to remind you to lock the screen. Just a theory, you have to want to believe.

The financial results weren’t too hot. Last year saw Sony Ericsson register a pre-tax loss of more than a billion euros. Sony Ericsson themselves are blaming poor sales and a contracting global phone market. Some people are pointing fingers at certain areas of their portfolio as lacking exciting products that can compete with competitors. However, I have to confess something … the loss is my fault. At Christmas I accepted a free advent calendar from Sony Ericsson. I can only begin to imagine the serious economic damage giving me this freebie must have caused them and I am ridden with guilt. I am here publicly offering to post the calendar back to them (with the chocolate still inside) and I will cover postage as well!

Mooooo!

Angus’ Week

Wednesday, January 20th, 2010

A bit late this week I know, but I’ve been a very busy cow over the past 7 days! Let’s take a stroll through what I’ve been up to …

Of course we were upgrading the forum this past week! Why are we upgrading? Well most of you probably think that it’s to introduce new features and make the forum faster. Nothing could be further from the truth. You see, Ixalon, our man at the controls, is a really good programmer, but he really needs to fix bugs every once in a while and quite simply our previous version of IPB didn’t have enough for him so we had to introduce a whole new set of bugs! You should have seen his little face light up in delight when he saw all the new bugs! scots’, always generous, has been compiling a big list of even more bugs for him so he’ll be happy for weeks to come! (Btw if you are wondering why there isn’t a Mooo! button on the forum it’s because the admins don’t listen to me.)

It’s been a bit of a quiet week for Sony Ericsson, but finally some good news for a change! Their market share in the UK is up! What they didn’t tell you is that is because they have adopted a new selling strategy. Bert Nordberg has hired a transit van and has been touring the UK selling Satios from the back of it. You might have spotted him at your local market in a flat top cap and sheepskin coat with his distinctive selling pitch “Satiooo! Satiooo! Three for a fiveeer! Get your Satiooo ere’”. It seems to be working well. See, we told you Bert would kick some ass!

We also had Faith making an appearance on the tubes. Now let me just say that I know there are already lots of qwerty devices on the market from Samsung and LG and yes I know that Windows Mobile has all the sex appeal of an octogenarian in suspenders and heels and yes almost everyone who has seen it has been violently ill (this clip illustrates it well), but I am not going to criticise it. I am going to be different. I am determined to say one nice thing about it. Let me see … oh I know … it has a white keypad, which will match the white curtains I have in my cow shed (I may be a 2,000 lbs cow, but I do like the place to look nice).

Well that’s all for his week folks! Mooooo!

X10: Pick A Date

Wednesday, January 13th, 2010

Will they? Won’t they? What am I talking about? The release date of the X10 of course! Only a few days ago we’d heard that the release date might have been pushed back to March, but then there seemed to be talk of it making an appearance in February after all. The initial date we were all looking forward to was 10th February, but that has almost certainly been pushed back, the question is then, how far back?

PlayNow are already taking pre-orders for the X10, SIM free, for £499. They’re giving a due date of 19th February, not all that far off the initial 10th February that had been bandied around. For their part Sony Ericsson aren’t giving an exact date, the Mirror quoting unspecified company executives as having told them, at the initial announcement, that the launch would be Q1 of this year. That is in keeping with a 19th February release date, but of course it is also in keeping with a release date some time in March.

To some the whole thing might seem a bit academic; February or March, what does it matter? Putting the impatience of geeks like myself to one side, a March release would do two things; it would further reinforce Sony Ericsson’s growing reputation as a company that can’t get its products out in time and secondly it would give the competition that little bit longer to steal a march on the X10. The MWC is held in the midle of February, the 15th-18th to be exact, and it will actually make some difference which side of the MWC the X10 becomes available.

If it’s before the MWC the X10 will have a relatively unfettered field to play in as the newest high-end Android. It will have an easier time of capturing mindshare amongst consumers, especially given that other high-end Android handsets like the Nexus One or the Droid aren’t widely available in much of Europe yet. After MWC the X10 may find itself competing with newly announced products from other manufacturers, and whilst those newly announced products may not actually be available to consumers, they will still have an impact and possibly persuade customers to forgo the X10 and  hold out a little longer.

Angus’ Week

Saturday, January 9th, 2010

What a week! Sony Ericsson have been busy bees over the past 7 days so let’s take a look at what’s been happening …

The big news story of the week was the introduction of two new features to Sony Ericsson handsets: the eagerly awaited Delay 2.0 and a surprise in the form of Dropped-from-Sale, which might be this year’s killer feature.

When the X10 was announced last year there was much speculation over it’s feature set with some specs not being confirmed until much later i.e. a magnetometer. Well this week the wait was finally over as it was revealed that the X10 will indeed ship with the much anticipated Delay 2.0, the much delayed update to Delay 1.0 first seen with the W960. Sony Ericsson fans were ecstatic at the news with Mr Arthur Arthurson posting “This has made my day! I thought I was going to have to buy the X10 in February now I get the added fun of waiting until March!”

Sony Ericsson weren’t done yet though as they rolled out one of the most exciting features we’ve ever seen: Dropped-from-Sale. It’s a really innovative service that allows Sony Ericsson to announce a new product, build customer interest and then allow the product to be cancelled and frustrate customers. Mr Arthur Arthurson commented “Wow! I can’t believe other manufacturers aren’t doing this. Just the other day I was interested in buying an X2 and now thanks to Dropped-from-Sale I’m really frustrated. How cool is that?!” Initially Dropped-from-Sale will only ship with the X2, but many wonder whether Sony Ericsson might upgrade the X10’s Delayed 2.0 to full Dropped-from-Sale.

This week also saw the appearance of two new handsets from Sony Ericsson. Let’s take a look at them:

Kanna will be a Symbian 5th series device and is very similar to Kurara, the previously seen HD recording Symbian device from SE. The main difference is that Kanna features a slide out QWERTY keyboard. SE have wisely waited until their competition tired themselves out releasing qwerty handsets like the BL3310, BL3410, and KS360 before releasing their own. This way it has a better chance to sell you see than if SE were actually leading the trend. Also the choice of Symbian 5th Edition is quite shrewd because whilst all the buzz is about Android there must still be some people who want to pretend they’re using a Nokia when they’re not. As one customer, a Mr Arthur Arthurson, pointed out “Thank goodness this comes behind the trend, nothing puts me off more than buying a handset that everyone is talking about”.

The other new handset this week was Robyn, a smaller version of the X10. It’s unknown whether Robyn will ship with Delay 2.0 like it’s big sister, but we can’t imagine SE would leave it out. It’s expected to be announced next month at the MWC and with it’s similarity to the X10 some are wondering if they will be able tell them apart. Mr Arthur Arthurson offered the following advice “Hire an ant with a pedometer to walk across both phones so you can accurately measure them”.

That’s all for this week folks! Moooooooo!

Sony Ericsson: 2001-2009

Wednesday, December 30th, 2009

There are only 2 days left of 2009 and indeed only 2 days left in this decade. With that in mind many blogs have been indulging in retrospectives looking back over the decade and judging what they think are the best and worst gadgets and tech of the past ten years. Whilst Sony Ericsson itself hasn’t actually been around for a full 10 years, this is the end of the first decade they’ve been in business so time for a look back at what they’ve done right … and what they’ve done wrong.

The Good

You can’t get much better than starting at the beginning … the T68i. I still have mine and it still works as well as when it was new. It was ahead of its time and even now it’s a passable mobile phone. Sure it doesn’t have GPS, an inbuilt camera, etc, but the fact that it still works almost 10 years later counts for a lot.

The P800 was Sony Ericsson’s first smartphone, indeed one of the first proper smartphones and looking back a precursor to today’s smartphones with their large touchscreens and installable apps. Compared with current handsets it’s slow, cumbersome, bulky, and generally archaic, but it was the most powerful handset of its day and ushered in the much loved P series.

The K750 and W800 were two of the best handsets Sony Ericsson has ever produced. That’s not just my opinion, look at the sales figures. Look at how many people still look back on them fondly. The W800 heralded the dawn of Walkman phones and for the first time gave consumers the capability to play music on their phone with a quality approaching dedicated mp3 players.

The K800 was arguably Sony Ericsson’s last great handset. It took the K750 and built upon it to give a better camera, a proper flash, 3G data speeds and a pretty attractive form factor. The fact that so many are still in use is a testament to its quality and its popularity.

The Bad

When first announced the W960 was greeted with much enthusiasm; here was a handset with 8 Gb of inbuilt memory, WiFi, and a touchscreen, features, at the time, that were top class and certainly whetted many an appetite. Where did it go wrong? Well it was pretty much down to that old bug bear of Sony Ericsson’s … delays. Wars have been fought and won in less time than it took for the W960 to finally appear on the shelves and by that time consumers had moved on.

The W910 was one of those handsets that should have been great and to be fair it sold well, but that doesn’t disguise the horrendous firmware problems that dogged the handset. Numerous customers reported problems with their handsets and in the end it became a testament to slipping quality, something that was to dog Sony Ericsson in later handsets.

Another handset that suffered from poor quality was the W580 with cracked keypads galore. Like it’s big sister, the W910, it sold well, but left many customers unhappy as their keys split in two. Great sales, but another knocking for Sony Ericsson’s reputation amongst consumers.

In an all too similar situation to the W960 we saw Satio, then dubbed Idou, unveiled to much fanfare and excitement. A 12 MP camera! A first for the mobile industry outside of South Korea and it was Sony Ericsson leading the way. 10 months later the handset finally got itself into the shops and sales began in earnest. The long wait hadn’t helped, but once it was out business was brisk and consumers seemed prepared to overlook that. Disaster was to strike barely a few weeks later though as Satio was pulled from sale in the UK owing to firmware problems. Although it was back on sale soon afterwards the damage was done and again Sony Ericsson’s once high reputation for quality had taken a blow.

The Ugly

Some handsets Sony Ericsson have released over the years deserve to be forgotten, but we’ll dredge them up here anyway!

The K850 might be a surprise on this list for some, but hear me out. The keypad alone is enough to condemn this handset as awful; tiny square peg like keys widely spaced beneath a touch sensitive panel on the screen that was prone to failure does not a good handset make! The fact that the K850 was thicker than a dictionary didn’t help either.

I know Michell will disagree with me here, but Pureness is arguably the biggest waste of time, money and resources Sony Ericsson have ever publicly committed to. A luxury phone with a price tag to match whilst the rest of their line-up suffered from qualitative issues doesn’t strike me as a great idea. It’s quirky sure, but eminently forgettable.

Agree? Disagree? Have I left something out? Let us know in the comments!

WSJ: Should SE & Moto Merge … ?

Monday, December 21st, 2009

… it’s an interesting question to say the least. On the front of it many might say it’s an obvious solution for two manufacturers who aren’t doing too well and who really need some sort of push to get them back in the big time. The WSJ puts across some decent arguments, not the least of which is a speculated saving of 10% on operational costs, something that both companies would no doubt love to see.

Market share is another area that apparently makes a convincing case for a merger. Motorola has around 17% of the American market whilst SE has over 12% of the European market and they each have 10% in China and India respectively. Taking the numbers at face value that would seem like a great match-up, all the major markets covered with a strong presence and each would have access to markets where they have traditionally not been so strong i.e. Europe for Motorola and America for Sony Ericsson.

Android is another area where there could be a great conflux of synergy. Both companies are effectively betting their future performance on the success (or failure) of an Android device; Sony Ericsson has the X10 and Motorola has the Droid/Milestone. Up until now HTC has pretty much led the pack when it comes to Android, but a resurgent SE-Moto partnership focusing on Android might see HTC relegated to second place.

So why not? Well as the saying goes, two wrongs don’t make a right. Just shoving two declining companies together doesn’t guarantee success, all it does is generate some headlines and maybe slashes costs. Far more relevant would be how SE and Moto gel as cultures. Who will lead in R&D? Whose ethos will dominate? Whose ideas will come to the forefront? Don’t forget we aren’t talking about two companies joining up and having a cosy relationship, we’re talking about three companies joining up and having a menage-a-trois. Things haven’t always been peachy between Sony and Ericsson if reports are to be believed, is adding a third player into the mix really going to smooth the decision making process? I think not.

Leaving all that to one side for a moment though we are left with a very fundamental point, fewer manufacturers isn’t great for the consumer. I’m not just talking about direct capitalist competition, but competition in ideas. Homogenising the market into fewer and fewer players ends up leaving it with that little bit less diversity and creativity and that’s a price that’s, in my opinion, too high to pay for a 10% saving on operational costs.

Sony Ericsson Likes Android

Wednesday, November 25th, 2009

se-nse-se-android-logo

We’re currently expanding towards Android and it seems Sony Ericsson are liking that direction too. You don’t need reminding about the Xperia X10 which will be SE’s first Android based device but what we haven’t really heard before is how they feel about Android itself.

Well over on the SE Product Blog Rikard Skogberg has offered his thoughts on the platform after spending some time with the X10. It seems Android is making a good impression too as Rikard likes how smooth the OS feels as well as the number of apps available and the innovative spirit that surrounds them.

Head over and read the rest of the article for more thoughts: Some Personal Thoughts Around The Android OS

Mik

Mik’s Impatient Opinions: Sony Ericsson Satio

Monday, November 9th, 2009

I, like many of you, was hugely impressed when Satio was announced and I really wanted this to be the next great handset. The design is aesthetically fantastic and now that it’s here I still think it is as good looking as any phone available today, however, perhaps being something to look at is Satio’s best quality!

Let Me Hold It:

The Satio box is thoroughly unremarkable but the bundled accessories are impressive. The stylus is stylish, the headset is excellent and there’s a pretty substantial video out cable in there too.

Satio Accessories

Satio Accessories

The device itself has been made with Sony’s special brand of super glossy plastic which attracts finger prints and smudges from passers-by, let alone the actual user. Don’t expect to be able to admire that black sheen AND hold the phone at the same time unless you’re a snooker referee. Perhaps that’s why they chose a resistive touch screen, so you can handle the phone with pristine white gloves. The device also looks like it may be vulnerable to scratches but only time will tell as I’m not about to break out the sandpaper.

There’s a good compliment of hardware buttons including call/end, menu, camera shutter, camera modes, playback, volume and a very handy keylock slider but as with several other touch based devices there’s no direction input keys. As pretty as Satio may be, the straight sided construction of the device quickly becomes uncomfortable and it struggles to sit nicely for single handed use. This is made several times worse should you attempt to use the phone while charging. Once again Sony Ericsson has endeavoured to place the fastport in the worst possible position, here being on the left side just below centre. This means the charger protrudes annoyingly to obstruct either the right-hand fingers or left-hand palm preventing any comfortable hold.

Let Me Use It:

First boot provides a minor tutorial and the antiquated process of calibrating the resistive touch screen. This is a drag at the best of times but here it was a nightmare as the device repeatedly claims “too far from point x”, even when using the stylus smack-bang in the centre of each throbbing dot. I don’t know if this is common to all Satio’s but I experienced this on first use and again after another factory reset. Recalibration via the later menus runs without such issues but the accuracy and responsiveness of the screen remain questionable!

Once reaching the home screen things look good with the “Sony Ericsson” standby theme in use. Swiping left and right changes between the five predefined tabs while lists or pictures on these support the kinetic scrolling method everyone is used to, albeit nowhere near as responsive as that on an iPhone or Android device. Instead the scrolling often either fails or overshoots, at least until you get used to using slow and positive gestures…casual flicks are not welcome here. Customisation, meanwhile, is limited to say the least…you get to set the list of shortcuts and that’s it. Other Standby Themes are available but these are dull, offering nothing other than three static icons and custom shortcuts varying only the quantity or location.

Entering the main menu reveals a typical 4 x 3 icon grid and a single press on each continues to the next screen but this is where things start to get messy. Selecting contacts, for example, pops up a bland list of names (with no contact pictures other than the one currently selected) but inexplicably this list doesn’t scroll in the same kinetic manner as the (thumbnail rich) contact shortcuts list on the home screen. No, instead it is now completely the opposite! Trying to “throw” the list up only succeeds in making a selection bar go nuts while the list remains stationary. This selection bar must be grabbed and pushed to the bottom of the list in order to move down…I can only describe this as idiotic and un-natural and it makes accurate navigation of any list a virtual impossibility. The only acceptable solution is to pull out the stylus and drag the bar on the right of the screen, just like using Windows way back before the invention of scroll wheels. At this point the seemingly negligible omission of any direction buttons becomes a critical flaw.

But wait, it gets worse! In case the experience wasn’t yet uncomfortable enough things make a baffling change from single click to double click selection!?! On first encountering this I simply thought the phone was experiencing huge lag, in fact the device is fast, but it soon dawned that the UI was just suffering another irritating inconsistency.

Looking for any opportunity to escape this nightmare I fired up the camera with a satisfying snap of the lens cover. This is good, really good in fact, the 12MP camera doesn’t disappoint and the xenon flash makes indoor snaps easy. There’s an impressive feature set including Smile Shutter, Touch Capture, image stabilisation and BestPic making the camera probably the best thing about this device.

Satio Camera Sample

Satio Camera Sample

Of course Satio is Sony Ericsson’s “entertainment unlimited” flagship device so surely the other media features are up to scratch to? Thankfully they are thanks to the familiar, XMB-style Media menu which remains intuitive and benefits from convenient YouTube integration. Kinetic scrolling makes a return here which would ordinarily be great but on Satio it really just adds further confusion to a terribly mixed up control system.

Eventually I had to leave the camera and Media to try other essential components such as messaging and web browsing. Messaging is as disjointed as the rest of the UI! The standard messaging app doesn’t display conversation lists, a separate “Conversations” app is required for such a view. New message notifications ignore this app and lead to the default messaging view while also failing to even preview who the message is from. Upon replying to a text the on screen keyboard does not even appear, making you jab at the screen until it responds and selects the text input area before displaying your selected input method. On screen keyboards leave plenty to be desired too, all feeling a little too unresponsive and inaccurate for fast typing which leads to frequent mistakes. The mini qwerty is laughable and while the full screen qwerty is better there is annoyingly no auto-rotation to change between them. Handwriting recognition is reminiscent of that on UIQ, I like this but many will not.

Web browsing is adequate but the lack of kinetic scrolling again becomes painful while added irritation is provided by the fact that the device cannot automatically switch between network coverage and WiFi. One or the other is exclusively selected and if you want to save entering more menus the only option is to have “Always Ask” activated so that you must choose the connection accessible to you when starting browsing.

I’ve come to realise that Satio is a mongrel, an impure mix of Nokia and Sony Ericsson and with rather more Nokia than I’d have liked (just look at the screen below). Virtually all of my dislikes are due to the S60 OS and the poor execution of it on touch screen devices:

Satio Nokia Nokia Nokia Nokia Nokia

Satio Nokia Nokia Nokia Nokia Nokia

I was yet to use S60 5th Edition properly until now and perhaps was naïve to think that it would be better than this or that SE would have made better use of it. Unfortunately this device encapsulates the convoluted awkwardness of S60 and compounds it with the worst points of touch screen devices. There is nice hardware here, splashed with a couple of good software elements but there is no consistency and ultimately the user experience is confusing and annoying.

Let Me Get Rid Of It:

I’m bitterly disappointed with Satio, too much of the experience is uncomfortable and while the camera and Media are a saving grace, these are not enough to make me tolerate daily use of this device. If you want an intuitive and responsive touch screen phone, keep looking…and I suggest towards Android and iPhone.

If, however, you bizarrely enjoy the general unpleasantness of S60 5th Edition and require each of your UI screens to operate completely differently, go ahead, you should at least end up with some decent photos!

Mik

Mik’s Previous Opinions:

Mik’s Impatient Opinions: HTC Magic

Tuesday, October 27th, 2009

Good day to you all and welcome to my first full article in this series. Sadly it’s not the Satio article you’re hoping for, that’s been delayed because my girlfriend has gone away for a few days and taken the phone along with her, anyone would think I bought it for her….well I did actually but still, how dare she, it’s just inconsiderate!

Don’t worry though I have the HTC Magic and my new little green robot friend to talk about instead. Incidentally I do mean Android and not some sort of new hi-tech, eco-friendly mechanical helper….sadly.

Let Me Hold It:

Device boxes are often uninteresting and this is no exception aside from the fact that it’s surprisingly small. The device is presented to you on removing the lid, as is the fashion these days, while the headset (which I’ll come back to), charger, leather pouch and boring printed things lie beneath.

HTC Magic & Box

The Magic’s predecessor, the HTC Dream/G1, was irretrievably ugly and really not suitable for anyone with eyes so thankfully new designers appear to have been employed to make an Android device you wouldn’t be embarrassed to hold. They’ve done a good job and the Magic, in white, is a good looking device, just avoid the highly questionable MyTouch 3G version in merlot from T-Mobile! The dimensions are good and materials feel solid but not quite as weighty as an iPhone. Also unlike the iPhone, it isn’t as wide as a broadsheet newspaper and as a result is pleasant to hold for either one or two handed operation. The 3.2” capacitive touchscreen is bright and responsive while the Android related hardware buttons reside beneath. The trackball works ok but it largely redundant beyond moving around individual letters in text.

Let Me Use It:

As you’d expect the device runs through some setup screens upon first use, though you’ll be wanting a Google account to make full use of this. From here on in it’s a standard Android experience and there’s Donut in store depending where you live or if you take the sensible option of getting rooted and install the latest Cyanogen ROM.

With Android you’ll immediately notice the simplicity and user friendliness. Flicking between the various horizontally arranged home screens is enjoyable, particularly when you see that the wallpaper moves along with it. Perhaps the most compelling thing is to drag up the application drawer from the tab at the bottom of any home screen. It’s pleasing to use and can be smoothly dragged back and forth or simply thrown open or closed with a quick swipe. The drawer gives you a grid of icons and if you need telling what to do from there I suggest you turn off your computer, give all your electronics to the charity shop and move away somewhere to drink out of coconuts!

Less apparent at first but equally, if not more useful is the notification bar. This appears at the top of the screen showing the usual standby details as well as notifications of new events, active downloads, application updates etc. It behaves similarly to the drawer being dragged down smoothly to show you notification info which can then be dismissed or used as a shortcut to the relevant content. The usefulness of this became apparent when I received an SMS while in the middle of something else. Upon receipt, the SMS text is scrolled once across the notification bar like a news ticker, if you miss it just drag the bar down to read it again all without leaving what you’re doing. Never again do you need to quit something just to read “wuu2” from that friend you’d really rather just ignore.

Customisation is at the forefront of any Android experience because who wants to stare at screen after screen of icons on a black background? Well apparently quite a lot of people do but iDon’t (thanks for the pun Verizon) and it’s as easy as a long press on the home screen to mix things up. Long press an empty area to see a menu of shortcuts, folders and widgets you can add there. Long press an existing home screen item to move or dispose of it. Things got even easier once I realised application shortcuts could be dragged straight from the drawer to the home screen using the same long press method. The danger is in the widgets, they’re addictive and I soon found myself downloading as many as possible to try them all…..and then deleting the vast majority again! Apps are plentiful too via the Android Market, thankfully the majority are free and there are some really great pieces of work.

So it’s all plain sailing for the Magic then? Well, not quite. Media capabilities are good but nothing new, the camera is really not that great, especially in low light, and music playback is certainly nothing special not least because of the supplied headset. Headsets are a frequent HTC failing and this one is inexcusable unless they’re perhaps targeting the Ferengi market. The earphones are too big, not comfortable to wear and seem to manage not to block out any background noise…perhaps to distract from the lacking audio quality. What’s worse is the lack of a 3.5mm jack so you’ll be looking towards Bluetooth for a better experience.

Finally I can’t help but feel that this device is in infancy. Android is moving along fast and improving all the time but the internal hardware here is still first generation. The 528MHz Qualcomm processor is outdated and my particular Magic is short on RAM being a Google branded (32B) device. This results in performance hits when trying to get clever with the phone. It can multi-task but the price is a bit of lag which can be annoying at times.

Let Me Keep It:

Overall the HTC Magic is a great phone, I’m happy to use it every day and Android is definitely here to stay. The hardware can just about cut it for now but it will be blown away when the imminent 800MHz and 1GHz Snapdragon devices land along with Android 2.0. To that end I say this device is a good introduction to Android and a better experience than most other touch screen phones (let’s all laugh at WinMo) but not as speedy as an iPhone.

Definitely happy to keep it.

Cheers,

Mik

Mik’s Impatient Opinions: Introduction

Sunday, October 25th, 2009

Hi guys and girls,

I’d like to introduce something new for you, it’s “Mik’s Impatient Opinions”. Think of this as a review source but in a rather different way to the normal, in depth reviews you’re used to. After all there’s plenty of other people already doing that and I neither see the point or can really be bothered doing the same thing!

So instead I’m going to give you something a little more personal. I’m typically short on patience, quick to form opinions and quick to condemn. I think in this way I can cut to the chase and tell you what you really need to know in an efficient and possibly entertaining way though I expect some things I write may not be what fanboys want to hear.

I won’t be doing detailed comparisons, I don’t intend on spending hours taking photographs and I won’t be covering massive amounts of handsets but I will try to use my own style to highlight things that will affect your every day user experience with a device or application etc.

So keep a look out for my first article, especially if you’re considering a Satio, and I hope you enjoy what I write for you.

Cheers,

Mik