by Brad Kevelin
Just the first five are reason enough for me to switch from iPhone to the Droid X.
- Bigger Screen. The iPhone has a higher dpi, but the Android is 23% larger, meaning larger fonts. If you have young eyes and perfect vision, it doesn’t matter. If you’re over 40, or nearsighted or farsighted, the larger screen on the Droid X will be easier to read. The larger screen is also better for sharing and showing.
- Email Labels. Android allows you to organize email with labels or categories and follow-up flags. The iPhone forces you to use folders.
- Widgets vs. Launcher. The iPhone’s beautiful screen is wasted as a simple app launcher. The Droid puts real-time useful info on those screens, such as weather, calendar, text messages, notifications, etc.
- Radio Widgets. The Droid X allows for easier battery management, by putting one-click icons for turning on and off the wifi, cell, GPS, and Bluetooth radios. The iPhone makes you go through several screens.
- Battery Options. You can set peak hours to save battery life. Reports allow you to see what hardware is using the most juice (display, cell data, talk, GPS, Wifi, etc.)
- Contact Widgets. Setup your favorite contacts on a home screen for one-click calling, texting, and emailing.
- Keyboard Symbols. The symbols appear above the letters on the keyboard, which means less hunting for punctuation.
- Keyboard Voice Recognition. That mic on the keyboard means you can use voice recognition for any text input in any app.
- HDMI. View your photos and home videos via HDMI port. (But does not support other video such as YouTube or streaming.)
- Verizon Coverage. If you remember the map wars, you’ll know that Verizon has 3G in more places.
- Notifications. These are stored in a nifty pull-down on a home screen.
- Hardware Buttons. These allow for easier navigating on the phone (especially the Back button), and frees up screen real estate. The iPhone’s single button is limiting.
- Three Mics. Video recording allows you to choose which mics to use, such as when you want to provide narration.
- Flash. With Froyo 2.2 comes Flash, meaning you can see more video and play more games on web sites.
- FM Radio. For you NPR and talk radio fans.
- Social Integration. Facebook and Twitter neatly mesh with your address book and inbox.
- Expandable, Swappable Memory. Memory card support means you can get more memory (up to 40 GB) for less money. You could also have different sets of media on different memory cards.
- 8 Mp Camera.
- Digital Zoom. Cuts down editing time.
- Mechanical Shutter. Better for action shots.
- Bluetooth Voice Dialing. Quicker dialing, and better for in-car use, especially with the new driving laws.
- Portable Hotspot. Use your phone as a wifi hotspot for your iPad or notebook. (Costs extra.)
- Unlimited Data Plans.
- No Reception Problems. Problems have surfaced on the iPhone.
- Navigation. Google maps navigation built-in, and Google apps are nicely integrated throughout the phone.
- True Multitasking.
- Open Source. If something irritates you, you can fix it. Install apps without approval.
- Develop Apps on Windows. The iPhone still forces you to use a Mac.
- Customizing. Android in general lets you customize your phone to adapt to your work style and preferences. Apple in general makes you do it their way.
To be fair, the iPhone 4 has a few advantages.
- Facetime video conferencing.
- Front Camera.
- HD video at 30 fps. Instead of Droid’s 24. Better for panning and action.
- Cheaper Plans. Tiered data plans are cheaper for low volume users.
- Apps Already Bought. You may have invested in many iPhone apps.
- Reading in bed. If you’re nearsighted, the higher dpi screen will be easier to read up close without your contacts or glasses.
- Smaller, Lighter.
- N Wireless. The iPhone supports the faster 802.11n wireless.
- GSM – Worldphone. Use it overseas.
- More Apps available. But with 160,000 Android phones activated every day, this is bound to change.
- Gyroscope.
- Higher DPI screen. About 320 dpi vs the 240 dpi on the Droid X. However, both are considerably better than the 72-96 dpi standard on desktop displays.