Android 2.1 looking fast, furious on Motorola Droid

Alright, Droid owners, decent multitouch performance isn’t the only thing you’ve got to brag about. As you likely know by now, 2.1’s in the works for you — and from the latest video we’re seeing of an official test build running in the wild, we’re cautiously optimistic that it’s going to be a fantastic little update. As we’d reported some time back, the Nexus One’s revamped app launcher is missing, but multitouch appears to work like butter in both the browser and revamped Gallery app and the new news and weather widgets have made the cut as well. Most notable, though, might simply be the fact that everything flies — home screen switches, opening of the app drawer, zooming, it’s all mega-fast. Granted, anyone with an Android device knows that the speed of the device depends on the number of apps you’ve got running, the moon phase, and the direction of the wind, but it’s an encouraging sign nonetheless. Now if only Moto would stop fumbling the launch, we’d be good to go; in the meantime, though, check some video of the update after the break.

Continue reading Android 2.1 looking fast, furious on Motorola Droid

Android 2.1 looking fast, furious on Motorola Droid originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 04 Mar 2010 00:35:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Nexus One’s multitouch confused more easily than Droid’s?

Thought all multitouch-capable displays were created equal? Think again — Android and Me has posted a rather fascinating (if not somewhat depressing) video showing a demo multitouch app created by a game developer who’d grown suspicious after running into all sorts of trouble getting the feature to work the way he wanted on the Nexus One. First up, the Droid handles the demo with aplomb — two thumbs are recognized smoothly and consistently. Next, though, the Nexus One gets confused after a while and starts registering presses at the wrong corners of the on-screen box formed by the placement of the thumbs. There’s always hope that this could be fixed with a firmware bump, but that hope looks to be in jeopardy from language posted by a Google engineer in the official Android dev forums: “…this is how the touch screen hardware on the Nexus One works (which is essentially the same screen as on the G1 and myTouch). The Droid has a sensor from a different manufacturer, with different behavior. Other phones will likewise have different sensors.” In other words, Google seems to think that HTC’s just using a lower-quality sensor than Motorola is. That’s good news for Droid owners, we suppose — but with game development on Android still something of a non-starter, hardware issues like this keep fragmenting the user base and preventing big-name developers from jumping in and betting on the platform. Follow the break for video proof of the wackiness.

Continue reading Nexus One’s multitouch confused more easily than Droid’s?

Nexus One’s multitouch confused more easily than Droid’s? originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 03 Mar 2010 20:31:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HTC Desire’s Sense UI ported to Droid; HTC, Motorola cringe

If you work for Motorola, cover your ears and say “Blur Blur Blur Blur” at the top of your lungs over and over again for the duration of this post, because what we’re about to present is an unholy marriage the likes of which neither Sanjay Jha nor Peter Chou ever intended. It’s not the first time we’ve heard of a version of Sense finding its way onto Motorola hardware, but developers over on AllDroid have posted a bunch of video and stills claiming to have ported an HTC Desire’s (née Bravo’s) Sense-enabled firmware to Moto’s beast — and what’s more, there’s footage of it running Flash. Bear in mind that the speed at which Flash is running here looks downright painful — and we fully expect official Flash support on the Droid later this year anyhow — but anyone conflicted between the Droid’s muscular lines and HTC’s lovely skin might want to keep an eye on this project. It’s still very early in development, but the most important part of the port has already been finished: it shows the proper Droid logo on startup. Follow the break for video.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

Continue reading HTC Desire’s Sense UI ported to Droid; HTC, Motorola cringe

HTC Desire’s Sense UI ported to Droid; HTC, Motorola cringe originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 28 Feb 2010 17:25:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Quake 3 ported to Android, shows off Droid’s graphical prowess (video)

You should by now be well aware that there’s no shortage of games one can play on one’s beloved Droid, but just for the FPS old schoolers out there, how’s about a nice Quake 3 port to pass the time with? Yup, the game that defined the term multiplayer before World of Warcraft came around has been enabled on the Android OS, finally finding another mobile home after residing on Nokia handsets for so long. For its short development time, this looks a very well refined translation of the software and offers you customizable controls to go with thoroughly playable frame rates. And if you have an older Android phone, don’t despair — Quake 2 has also been ported over, so once you’ve had an eyeful of the Droid, why not hit the source link to find out how to get in on the action?

[Thanks, Anders]

Continue reading Quake 3 ported to Android, shows off Droid’s graphical prowess (video)

Quake 3 ported to Android, shows off Droid’s graphical prowess (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 25 Feb 2010 05:03:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Blast From the Past: Hands-On With the Motorola Devour

motorola devour

Motorola is cranking out Android handsets and its latest phone, the Devour, is here.

The Devour has a 3.1-inch touchscreen, an aluminum body and a custom user interface called MotoBlur that aggregates contacts and feeds from different social networking sites, such as Flickr, Twitter and Facebook, into a single stream. Priced at $150 with a two-year contract, the Devour will become the third Android phone to run on the Verizon Wireless network next month.

“The Devour is about streaming your social life into the phone,” says Dan Rudolph, director of product marketing for Motorola. “The more social networking accounts you have, the more value you will get from the phone.”

Still, our first look at the Devour was disappointing. Under the hood, the phone isn’t state-of-the-art in terms of its technical specification — it lacks multitouch, it doesn’t feature the 1-GHz Qualcomm processor seen on the Nexus One and runs an older version of the Android operating system. Nor does it impress with its looks. The much-touted aluminum body aside, the phone is bulky, big and very retro in its styling.

Here’s a closer look at it.

motorla devour2

The Devour is a slider phone with a physical keyboard that’s much more pleasant to use than the Motorola Droid. The keyboard, which seems carved directly into the aluminum body, has buttons that are soft, yet respond firmly.

But at 5.9 ounces, the phone is a bulky beast. It weighs almost the same as the Droid but it is positively plus-sized when compared to its lightweight peers: The iPhone 3G S is only 4.8 ounces and the Nexus One is just 4.5 ounces.

What makes the Devour seem hefty is its harsh, boxy look. Unlike the softer, rounded corners that are popular among most smartphones today, the Devour is a rectangular slab with sharp square edges in a hardware design that is reminiscent of the Palm VII. Motorola and Verizon say that they want to evoke a masculine look with the phone but hey, don’t boys want pretty devices too?

The Devour screen is bright but not as vivid as the OLED display on the Nexus One and it seems to smudge very easily. Just a few minutes of using it left fingerprint marks all over the display.

In an interesting twist, the Devour has a tiny touch-sensitive thumbpad on the right that can be used to scroll through the icons on the screen and select one. The slider, itself, though feels flimsy because it is also a toggle button on one of its sides.

The phone has a 600-MHz Qualcomm processor that is a tad faster than the Droid’s but is significantly slower than the 1-GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon chip used in the Nexus One.

motorola devour3

Instead of a removable back plane, the Devour has the cover for the battery and the microSD card at the side of the device — similar to what we see in a compact digital camera.

It’s an attempt  to make the phone more stable, says Motorola’s Rudolph, since smartphone users have complained about the battery cover at the back slipping off in some phones.

Beyond that, the Devour has its basics covered. It includes a camera capable of both video and still photos, a 8-GB microSD card, accelerometer, Wi-Fi and GPS.

motorla devour5

Though it’s the latest phone from Motorola’s stable, the Devour runs Android 1.6, which is a surprise considering that most of the latest Android phones use version 2.0 or 2.1 of the OS. The older Android flavor also means that Devour users have to manually download an update to get turn-by-turn navigation on their phone.

But what Motorola says will give the Devour its edge is the use of the MotoBlur skin, which is missing on the Android. After a quick initial setup, the MotoBlur brings in your Twitter feed, Facebook updates and e-mail and text messages into little widgets on the home screen.

Integrated contacts and data is the name of the game, so the interface aggregates corporate and personal e-mail accounts and display them on a single screen — though you can keep them separate if you want. You can also arrange to view new messages in a cardlike view (similar to the Palm Pre) or in an easily scrollable list.

There are some sweet extras. User can back up their phone for free on the MotoBlur website through their MotoBlur account. They can also track their phone for free and remote-wipe it if it is lost, a service that Apple charges $100 a year for with its MobileMe service.

devour6

Clearly, Motorola wants to get as many Android handsets out as it can, ostensibly in an attempt to give consumers the choice they want. But at this point, it feels like the process has lost its soul. There’s not much innovation in hardware design or in the user interface. The Devour is yet another cookie-cutter phone churned out to keep the corporate coffers full.

But in an extremely competitive smartphone market,  it’s an approach that may not be enough cut it with choosy consumers.

See Also:

Photos: Jon Snyder/Wired.com


Gallery: Robot Bartenders Sling Cocktails for Carbon-Based Drinkers

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The secret to a great cocktail, most connoisseurs would agree, has something to do with the ice, the liquor, the glass — and the bartender.

But what if the bartender is not a warm-blooded human with a sympathetic ear, but rather a cold, soulless machine made of pistons, valves and servos?

At a bar in San Francisco, a group of artists, engineers and tinkerers sought the answer with their creations: robots designed specifically to pour out a nice drink.

The booze-making bots included an all-mechanical, lever-operated robot; a Cosmobot with a rocket-shaped body; and Barnold, who is “strong and big, just like Arnold.”

“We really just like robots and cocktails, and both together seemed like the perfect thing,” said Simone Davalos, one of the organizers of the Barbot 2010 event. “There is no real aim for world-changing, paradigm-shifting technological achievement, at least not from our perspective, but who knows? Lots of amazing things have happened over cocktails.”

From cosmos to appletinis, these robots measured, mixed and poured out drinks that were precisely assembled. And those droids were mesmerizing to watch.

As for the drinks themselves, having sampled drinks from almost all the robots, my verdict is that the robots still have a long way to go. The cocktails taste just a little too clinical. There’s a missing ingredient in there. Could that be the human touch?

The Corpse Reviver

Even a humble cocktail robot can be an engineering marvel. The imaginatively named Corpse Reviver is a cleverly designed robot that’s completely mechanical.

“It’s all levers and linkages,” said Benjamin Cowden. who created the robot.

The Corpse Reviver has four levers that are attached to four bottles arranged in a circle. To make yourself a drink, place a glass at the center and pull the first lever. This pushes the attached bottle up, then tips a measured pour of a little more than an ounce into a bowl-shaped holding container. Do the same with the two other levers, and finally pull back on the fourth to release the stopper and push the liquid from the holding container into a second chamber that’s full of ice. A few seconds later, the drink is in the glass.

“This is my favorite robot in this room,” said Lillian Fritz-Laylin who had come to check out the event . “It’s interactive on multiple levels. It’s not just ‘push a button and walk away.’ And the drink was really good.”

Cowden designed the entire mechanism and sketched it out on a 2-D design program. All the parts for the robot have been custom laser-cut. And it’s the attention to details that really make this a winner. For instance, once a lever is pulled and the bottle tips out its pour, a hydraulic damper and spring mechanism make sure it slowly and steadily returns to its original position.

Photos: Jon Snyder/Wired.com


New Motorola Droid Battery Door Less Fall-Offy

motoandroidbatterydoorstop.jpg

[The new Moto Droid battery door on bottom, old on top. Photo by PJ Jacobowitz.]

Every new phone has its fair share of issues, as evidenced
by innumerable support forum logjams. The
biggest complaint against the Verizon’s Motorola Droid–at least from a hardware
standpoint–is almost certainly that pesky battery door, which has a tendency to
slip off when the phone is pulled out of a pocket.

For a while Verizon took a symbolic solution to the problem,
adding a fancy-looking band-aid (complete with Verizon logo to the rear of the
device
).
It was a stop-gap solution, at best.

This weekend, my own Droid suffered battery door loss in a
darkened bar–an issue I unfortunately wasn’t made aware of until I got home,
meaning, no doubt, that the piece of metal would almost certainly be lost
to me forever (the battery, MicroSD card, et al., thankfully, stayed put,
despite the lack of protection).

Verizon launches FiOS Mobile Remote app for Droid and Imagio

Controlling your TV from your phone isn’t a new concept, but Verizon just made it a bit sexier. Verizon FiOS owners this week can nab a new FiOS Mobile Remote app for their Motorola Droid or HTC Imagio. The application emulates regular remote buttons, but also tosses in an icon-based favorites view of channels, in addition to an ability to sling photos from the phone to the big screen. The phone hooks into your FiOS box over your local WiFi, and requires you to download a widget for the set top box as well to get everything synced up. We’re not exactly sure why this is limited to the Droid and Imagio right now — we’re sure the Droid Eris could handle the workload, for instance — but Verizon does say that it’s working on making additional handsets compatible in the future. Check out a video demo of the functionality after the break.

Continue reading Verizon launches FiOS Mobile Remote app for Droid and Imagio

Verizon launches FiOS Mobile Remote app for Droid and Imagio originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 18 Feb 2010 12:12:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Some Droid Eris owners getting Android 2.1 update?

We’re not entirely sure what’s going on here, but that’s a shot of a Droid Eris running Android 2.1, and we’re told the update came over the air — a story seemingly corroborated by a couple other people around the web. Unfortunately, it seems like things aren’t quite fully baked yet: the update doesn’t include Sense UI, and it apparently wipes all your data and doesn’t allow you to log back into your Google Account. Verizon tells us that the Eris update to a “newer” Android is still in testing and hasn’t yet been officially released, so we’re taking all this to mean that there’s been a slip-up along the line — especially since this obviously isn’t final software. In the meantime, we’d say Droid Eris users should probably back up their sets just to be safe.

[Thanks, Vido]

Some Droid Eris owners getting Android 2.1 update? originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 17 Feb 2010 18:26:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Motorola Milestone now available on Telus, AT&T*

Two days earlier than expected, Motorola’s Milestone has become available to the public via Telus Mobility. For Canadians, that means that you can wrap your palms around one of the sexiest Android devices out for as low as $199.99 on a 3-year contract, while it’ll set you back $499.99 with a 2-year deal, $549.99 with a 1-year agreement or $599.99 outright. Americans — you should pay close attention that to last figure. A half dozen Benjamins (not including losses in currency conversion and the trip to go get one) will land you what’s essentially a 3G-enabled Droid for AT&T’s network. You know you need an excuse to go see the Yanks take the ice against the Canucks on Sunday, so you might as well snap up your dream phone before heading back from Vancouver.

*AT&T support hinges on one’s ability to procure a Milestone from Canada, get it back across the border, unlock it and slide an activated AT&T 3G SIM card into it. Godspeed.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

Motorola Milestone now available on Telus, AT&T* originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 16 Feb 2010 11:09:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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