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Here is an interesting unvarnished review courtesy of Eve Guo of Alibaba.com posted today 10/17 about her experience of a week of using the G1 Phone. It has some good info that anyone thinking of purchasing this phone would want to know:

Her overall rating- She liked it.

 

First Person User Review by Eve Guo, courtesy of Alibaba.com

17 Oct 2008 02:36:13 GMT

T-Mobile G1, it goes on sale Wednesday.

The Google phone is now the second phone I’ve forced myself to put down so I could get some sleep.

The first was Apple’s game-changing iPhone.

What remains to be seen is if the Google phone will have the same impact that Steve Jobs’ beauty has had. I can say this: It deserves to be part of the same conversation as the iPhone.


The phone’s debut is significant because Google, like Apple, has the muscle to change an industry. The G1 is the first of what is expected to be many phones using Google’s Android open-source platform.

 

Is this G1 better than the iPhone? Well, are the Cubs better than the Sox?

The G1 is better if you like a physical keypad to tap out messages. If you’re enamored by the iPhone’s multitouch controls, the G1 may not impress you.

The G1 is an attractive phone, even if it is thicker and heavier than the iPhone. It’s intuitive too. In the week I’ve been testing it, I have yet to open the manual.

The G1 runs on T-Mobile’s new 3G network and is largely controlled by a touch screen, but not exclusively. There are three ways to navigate: touch, a keypad and a trackball. I completely overlooked the trackball at first. But when I handed the phone to my wife, a BlackBerry user, the first thing she did was use the trackball.

“BlackBerry users gravitate toward the trackball,” said Rhone Rarick, T-Mobile’s senior brand manager. “Younger consumers gravitate toward the keypad because they like to text a lot.”Four hard keys sit on the bottom of the phone. The keys are for making and ending a call, one for the home screen and a back button.

Activation was a snap: You’ll be prompted for a Google account if you don’t have one. My phone was activated and my contacts were downloaded onto the G1 in minutes.

The iPhone remains the sexier product. You won’t buy the G1 because it wins the beauty contest. But as Google’s first phone, it’s impressive.

 

THE GOOD

Touch screen: It’s very responsive and the best I’ve used outside of Apple’s multitouch screen.

Mulitimedia: It’s easy to add music, pictures and videos.

Browsing: The Web browser has a neat feature, called Window (hmmm), that shows four open Web pages at once. Tap on one to enlarge. Also, you can increase or decrease the size of a Web page with the touch of a finger.

The Android market: Like Apple’s App Store, it shows promise: There will be 50 third-party programs available at launch with more to come. I’ve downloaded several applications, including a faithful version of Pac-Man and one to watch the preparation of a recipe.

Compatibility: Works with Macs and PCs (but not iTunes) for media downloads.

 

THE BAD

Privacy: You need a Google account, which worries some privacy advocates.

Software: It cannot access Microsoft’s Exchange software, widely used in corporate America. Expect that to change as it did with the iPhone.

Headphone jack: The G1 does not include a standard headphone jack. You must attach the included headphones into a mini-USB port, the same one used to charge the phone. If you’re charging, you can’t listen to music. Plus, you can’t use third-party headphones to improve the average sound, a very un-Googly approach.



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Here is the skinny on the new Google G1 Phone. Take a look also at a companion post following this one, labeled Part 2 , which is a review from an editor at Alibaba.com who had a chance to use the phone and give her opinion on it (she liked it).

As many of you already know, Wednesday, October 22, the much anticipated T-Mobile G1 with Google, the first phone powered by Android, an innovative mobile software platform will be available to the public. T-Mobile is the exclusive service provider and existing T-Mobile are able to order their new G1 phone now.

The T-Mobile G1 combines full touch-screen functionality and a QWERTY keyboard with a mobile Web experience that includes popular Google services such as Google Maps Street View, Gmail, YouTube and others.

Dimensions: 4.60” x 2.16” x 0.62”; Weight: 5.6 ounces; Display: 3.17 inches

Bluetooth enabled, GPS capabilities, voice recognition, voice dialing, speakerphone, GSM/GPRS/EDGE/Wi-Fi and UMTS/HSDPA, 850/900/1700/1800/1900/2100Mhz

Priced at $179.00 plus taxes and fees with 2 year T-Mobile plan

Check T-Mobile’s site for the 92 cities currently in the 3G network.

If you are not in one of those areas, your G1 phone will still work for most functions.

What it looks like:

 

 

Key Features of the T-Mobile G1 include:

* Intuitive user interface and hinged touch screen that slides open to reveal a full QWERTY keyboard

* Convenient trackball for one-handed navigation

* Three color options in the U.S. - white, brown and black

* One-click contextual search to instantly find relevant information with a touch of a finger

* Full HTML Web browser and zoom function that expands any page section by simply tapping on the screen

* One-touch access to popular Google applications including Google Maps Street View, Gmail, YouTube and others

* Google Maps provides map information, satellite imagery, local business info and driving directions as well as MyLocation to let users know where they are; Google Maps Street View syncs with the built-in compass on the phone – an industry first – to allow users to view locations and navigate 360 degrees by simply moving the phone with their hand

* Google Maps Street View for virtual street-level exploration while on the go

* Rich HTML email client, which seamlessly syncs e-mail from most other POP3 or IMAP mail services, including Gmail; displays photos and graphics right along with the text

* A beta version of Android Market for access to new, innovative software applications to personalize your device to fit your life from games, music and on-the-go shopping

· At-Launch Applications:

o ShopSavvy: designed to help people do comparative shopping

o Ecorio: developed to help people keep track of their daily travels and view what their carbon footprint looks like

o BreadCrumbz: enables people to create a step-by-step visual map using photos; customers can create their own routes, share them with friends or with the world

o Amazon MP3 Store (pre-installed on device): enables people to search DRM-free, full-track MP3 music and download that music from Amazon directly to their device using a Wi-Fi connection

· Built-in support for T-Mobile’s 3G (HSDPA) and EDGE network as well as Wi-Fi; T-Mobile G1 will seamlessly transfer between 3G and accessible Wi-Fi networks including T-Mobile HotSpot locations worldwide

· Built-in support for YouTube allows customers to enjoy the website’s originally-created content, easily navigate through YouTube’s familiar video browsing categories or search for specific videos

· Built-in instant messaging client with support for Google Talk, AOL, Windows Live Messenger and Yahoo! Messenger

· Support for advanced text messaging features to easily flag, delete or move groups of messages and keep track of group conversations through threaded text messaging

· 3-megapixel camera with photo-sharing capabilities

· Music player supports MP3, M4A (iTunes AAC, DRM-free), AMR, WMA, MIDI, WAV, OGG Vorbis

· Pre-installed 1 GB Micro SD memory card that can hold approximately 500 songs (device supports up to an 8GB memory card)

· 11 pre-loaded songs including tracks from The Helio Sequence, Kinski and Flight of the Conchords

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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See the next post for the Review of the G1 Phone courtesy of Eve Guo as published today on Alibaba.com.

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