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Flashback: the Motorola Droid started a proxy war with the iPhone

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Post time: 27-4-2020 03:51:54
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This is a story of rivalry between former partners – Motorola vs. Apple, Verizon vs. AT&T. We’ve already covered the first iTunes phone, the Moto ROKR, Steve Jobs could barely hide his contempt for the device when showing it on stage.

This union was dissolved quickly as the team at Cupertino went on to make their own phone. A phone they will sell exclusively through AT&T. The carrier enjoyed an influx of new customers as the carrier was the only place you could buy the desirable iPhone.

Verizon customers couldn’t get in on the action until the iPhone 4 due to a technical limitation, the 4 was the first to support CDMA networks. By the way, if you’re not familiar with the story of “Ma Bell”, it had a monopoly on the US phone market until 1984 when the Justice Department broke it up into several companies (actually, there were several break-ups, but that's beyond the point here). Those “Baby Bells” would eventually form AT&T and Verizon, among others.


The Motorola Droid for Verizon

Back to today’s story - Verizon needed its own halo phone that would have customers lining up to sign a new contract – a whole line of phones, in fact, for which it licensed the name “Droid” from Lucasfilm.

We will focus on one model in particular, the Motorola Droid (the rest of the world knows this as the Milestone). In 2007, the original iPhone reached the 1 million units sold mark in 74 days. In 2009, the Droid would sell 1.05 million units in 74 days – only a bit more than the Apple phone, but it was a victory nevertheless.

Verizon launched an aggressive “Droid Does” campaign, which featured a list of “iDon’t” limitations of iPhone and iOS. “iDon’t have a real keyboard, “iDon’t run simultaneous apps, “iDon’t take night shots”, “iDon’t customize”, “iDon’t run widgets”, “iDon’t have interchangeable batteries” .

And Droid did. The keyboard was a full slide-out QWERTY in the vein of the T-Mobile G1, though instead of a trackball it had a D-pad. It was comfortable offering great tactile feedback and enabling fast typing. The lack of a number key was an issue, but only a small one.


A pretty comfortable keyboard

There was a virtual keyboard available on the 3.7” screen for quick texts, for longer you would slide open the hardware one and begin typing. It’s a shame that the phone didn’t come with an Office document editor, only a viewer, but you could buy one if you needed it.

Speaking of the 3.7” screen, its 480 x 854px resolution meant it was larger and much sharper than the 3.5” 320 x 480px panel on the iPhone 3GS, Apple’s 2009 model. And was a 16:9 screen, which had already established itself as the aspect ratio of choice for multimedia.


Motorola Droid/Milestone ompared with the Apple iPhone 3GS

There was one “iDo” thing that “Droid Didn’t” – multi-touch. We mentioned that in the Nexus One Flashback too, it was a patent issue. That was cleared up eventually and the Android 2.1 Eclair update enabled pinch to zoom in the Browser, Gallery and Google Maps.


The browser gained pinch zoom support with the Android 2.1 update

The Moto Droid originally launched with Android 2.0. That was a pretty big deal as previous versions of the OS were limited to 65K colors, v2.0 enabled proper 8-bit support for 16 million colors. The 3GS already had a 16M color screen, so that was more of an advantage over previous Androids.

So, what about the camera? The 5MP shooter on the back of the Motorola Droid had a higher resolution than the iPhone (3.15MP) and it had an LED flash, something that Apple omitted. It recorded 720 x 480px video at 30fps, not 16:9, but still wider than the iPhone’s 640 x 480px video.


Motorola Droid/Milestone camera samples

What else? The Motorola Droid did in fact have a removable battery, 1,400mAh in capacity. And it had a microSD slot, something that Apple never allows on its pocketable gadgets. The battery did block the microSD slot, so you couldn’t hotswap cards, but that’s a minor issue.

And yes, Android ha

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