James Cridland's blog

A radio futurologist writing about what happens when radio and new platforms collide

« | Blog index | »

24 hours with a Google Nexus One

Posted on Tuesday, February 9th, 2010 at 4:51pm. #

Google Nexus One

For no apparent reason, I bought a Google Nexus One phone at the end of my round-the-world trip (while sitting in a hotel room in India while confusing Google that I was really in London). As the phone made it from the US to the UK (via East Midlands Airport and then to London Heathrow) I was making it from India to the UK, via Zurich Airport and then to London City. I did beat the phone, but only by a couple of hours.

I mentioned that I’d got one, and a few people have asked what I think of it.

So, to my first 24 hours with a Nexus One, seen through the eyes of an Apple iPhone user for the past couple of years. This is done without reading the instruction manual, as is my usual way of using new electronics; I always read the manuals cover-to-cover after a week, to learn new tricks.

Buying the phone
Yay: the link to DHL meant I knew exactly when it was going to arrive.
Yay: it’s unlocked!

Initial setup isn’t great
Boo: On setup, it asks you for a ‘Google Account’. And, as any Google Apps user knows, sometimes this can also mean a Google Apps account (my @cridland.net one), or sometimes you can only use a @gmail.com account. My first step, therefore, was to, um, Google to discover that a Google Apps account was actually acceptable as signup.
Boo: It didn’t automatically know what the settings were for my O2 iPhone contract; so it attempted to try and set up the phone without a data connection. In its credit, it knew enough to tell me this, and to offer me the chance of setting up a wifi connection, so I was able to complete setup. I then had, yes, another Google session to discover the correct settings for an O2 iPhone contract on the Nexus One.
Boo: Once I’d nearly completed setup, it had noticed that there was an update of Android available for download, and that just dumped me right back to the beginning again.
Yay: Once I’d managed the above on the new build of Android, I didn’t have to set up silly things like my email or calendar: it just did it all automatically. Most impressive setup.
Yay: I didn’t need to plug it into a computer and download bazillions of pieces of software. Take that, Apple! (And I still haven’t had to plug it into a computer).

Google integration is excellent
Yay: Send me an email, and it pings the phone (and the Gmail client is excellent). The calendar automatically updates as soon as I change it on the website (or vice-versa). The contacts work perfectly. And it lets my @gmail.com account coexist with my Google Apps @cridland.net one.
Meh: However, I was already doing all this on the iPhone: with push email, contacts and calendar. True, it required a little setting up, but once I’d done that, it worked just perfectly too. This isn’t a complete win for a Nexus One.
Yay: I assumed that ‘Gallery’ (with an icon that looks like a photo gallery) was going to be empty; but to my amazement, it isn’t. It uses my Picasa photographs too, and other things. Very neat.
Yay: Google Voice is hidden from UK users, but easy to activate if you know how. I forward my calls to it; it’s perfectly handled on this phone.

Build quality
Yay: I rather liked the (free) engraving service. I nearly put my mobile number on it, and then realised how stupid that would be. It’s not really ‘engraved’ as such, but it’s nice having my email address on the back of the phone.
Yay: The display is much clearer. Much clearer. Yum.
Meh: It uses a micro USB cable, and not a mini USB cable. Now, this is the standard, so it probably should have a ‘yay’, but everything I have in this house (with the exception of the iPhone) uses a mini USB cable, so it’s a bit of a nuisance. I’ll survive.
Boo: The screen is significantly less touch-sensitive than the iPhone, and requires a little more pressure. I’m also convinced that the screen is calibrated slightly too ‘low’ for my fingers; I’m forever hitting the wrong thing.

Included software apps
Yay: Google Maps is much better than the iPhone, with the inclusion of Latitude and a significantly better display. Google itself is constantly including local results in everything, which is excellent. And multitouch and things just work.
Yay: The browser is very snappy, and also works rather well when you double-click, reformatting parts of the page to make it more visible.
Yay: The location field in ‘calendar’ is clickable and opens Google Maps, so I can see where the meeting is. C’mon, Apple, it’s not that hard…
Yay: I can invite people to meetings with the calendar app, rather than have to jump onto the PC.
Yay: Google Talk works brilliantly. And in the background, too! Yay!
Boo: If I go into the calendar and search, it does a web search. Huh? I just wanted to find out when I had a meeting with Bill, can’t I just search for Bill? Seemingly not.
Boo: The calendar’s UI is inconsistent; I have to drag up and down in calendar view, but left and right in day view, to get to the next month or day. That’s a bit silly.
Boo: The Gmail app is great, but do I really have to scroll right down to the bottom of the message, past the pointless terms and conditions and stuff, to get to the ‘reply’ button? Why doesn’t it float like it does on the iPhone web client?
Boo: The keyboard is really odd to get used to, and I keep missing the space key. And the full-stop, while in a better place than the iPhone, is in a different place and therefore irritating to hit.
Boo: No world clock application? Pthrhrhrt.
Boo: While faster than the iPhone, it’s not as whizz-bang; no nice animations, and the whole interface looks a little less polished.

Downloadable software apps on the Android Market
Yay: Spotify is here, and way better than the iPhone version (not least since it works in the background)
Yay: Last.fm is here, and scrobbles the music I listen to on this device, and last.fm radio works great too
Boo: No proper Skype. Instead, something called SkypeLite, which doesn’t do the job at all. Pointless.
Yay: Google Listen is a nice little app which may well totally change my consumption of podcasts. Very nice indeed.
Yay: That Layars augmented reality thing is very cool indeed.
Yay: beebPlayer is everything that a decent BBC iPlayer app should be, complete with live TV and live radio. Picture quality is disappointingly poor, however, and seems to use a version of the video which is very badly topped/tailed.
Boo: Not too many radio apps (and most that are, are Spodtronic ones). Special mention to Absolute (for a hobbled thing that doesn’t work in the background) and Capital (for a very basic app that does at least play in the background – but sadly only contains Capital and not LBC). I can’t find an alternative to Wunderradio – anyone?
Boo: Curiously, the very thing that gets in the way of the iPhone – Apple’s requirement to review apps before release – is the thing that is a problem on this Android phone. There are hundreds of apps in Android Market that are quite simply appalling; copyright-violations in their iconography (one uses Apple’s Safari logo as a compass app!), and some that look like password phishing programs (“Facebook Pro”, anyone) or simple spam. The complete lack of any quality control is actually rather frustrating. Further, Android Market isn’t actually that great – the search functionality lacks Google’s spelling auto-correct, and the order it returns appears almost randomly generated, rather than based on popularity or anything else discernable. Some apps have very odd UI indeed, and some look hideous. “Wheat from the chaff” has never been more valid – and it could be that it’s the very openness that gets people interested in the Nexus One is the thing that hampers the phone from achieving mass-market adoption.

Overall
The killer on the Nexus One is the flawless integration with Google, and the opportunities that the openness of the platform provides. I’m pleased that most of the apps I use on the iPhone have made it over to Android (though clearly this is a second-best platform for most).

In short, I’m quite impressed, so far, with the Nexus One, though there are significant shortcomings with Android Market. It is, however, definitely a geek’s phone for now – Google’s challenge is to make it as mainstream as the iPhone appears to have become.

PS: almost forgot.
Boo: No FM radio.

17 comments

John Wesley-Barker
commenting at February 9th, 2010 at 4:59pm

Thanks James,

Interesting review and you’ve helped me make up my mind – I am a VERY keen speed and I’m a Google Apps user, but I’ve invested too much in my iPhone Apps to say good bye to it for a Nexus One. Perhaps I’ll change my mind – but I VERY much appreciate your review here as the only other reaction I’ve had is that of Leo Laporte who loves it. It’s the OLED.

Michael
commenting at February 9th, 2010 at 5:03pm

Give DroidLive a try as an alternative to WunderRadio. It works in the background and you can listen to Absolute Radio.

Glenn
commenting at February 9th, 2010 at 5:19pm

Cool write up, I have the HTC Hero and love it very much :)

I thought Google Voice wasn’t available outside the US? Can I get it to work in the UK on my phone? :D

David Johnston
commenting at February 9th, 2010 at 5:41pm

“beebPlayer is everything that a decent BBC iPlayer app should be, complete with live TV and live radio. Picture quality is disappointingly poor, however, and seems to use a version of the video which is very badly topped/tailed.”

Yup, that’s because it uses the 3G/Nokia streams, which for some reason are completely different to the Flash ones, hence subtitles need manual shifting, and the quality is well below what any Android phone is capable of.

Unfortunately, it’s also the only stream Android can play – the iPhone streams use a container than OpenCore2 can’t read, and of course Android has no RTMP support so the Flash streams are out, and compiling librtmp has proven to be a bitch due to all the various dependencies…

Still, it was only meant as a temporary solution until the Beeb do their own client, or let me access higher res streams via RTSP!

David Johnston
commenting at February 9th, 2010 at 5:43pm

Oh also, apparently the Nexus one does have FM capability on the board, but not exposed to the system/OS, pending drivers!

Chris
commenting at February 9th, 2010 at 5:55pm

For Skype you could try Fring. It’s not brilliant, but it lets you do Skype voice calls properly (i.e., over a data connection instead of running off and ringing a local rate number).

Adam Bowie
commenting at February 9th, 2010 at 6:21pm

I got to borrow the “work” Nexus One for three days, and the only think I’d add to the above is that the battery life is pretty poor. Well it’s probably on a par with an iPhone, but for us Nokia users, it’s pretty ropey. At least that’s the case if you’re using WiFi at home/work, and 3G elsewhere. I found that I had to charge it fully every night, and that’s back to 1995 for me.

The Android Market is poor, but at least you can install any program that anybody’s written! Google Sky Map is brilliant though, and enough to make me want an Android phone.

The real odd thing on it is the trackball which is basically pointless. You don’t need it, and in my entire time using it, I didn’t use it once.

I’d buy one. But I think I’ll wait to see what the Sony Ericsson X10 is like. It has a much better camera – and that’s kind of important to me. There’s also rumours that it might have decent 720p video. Or not.

And there’s the HTC and Motorola phones coming very soon that are similarly specced to the Nexus One. My one concern with buying from the US is that if it breaks then you’ve got an annoying international repair process to go through (at least until Vodafone start selling it). The same is true for the Amazon Kindle of course.

Steve Paget
commenting at February 9th, 2010 at 10:58pm

So the good things (Google integration etc) are the same things that made me buy a G1 a year ago.

I like Listen, but prefer Doggcatcher, a neat little podcast downloader/scheduler. One of only two Apps I have bothered to pay cash for.

James Cridland
commenting at February 10th, 2010 at 10:44am

I should also mention that it’s lovely to have Latitude and Google Buzz within my Google Maps application, but because I’m using Google Apps rather than a Google Account, they don’t work. This is a known issue, and really rather irritating… bah.

The benefit of the Android – that I got an update to my Maps client the instant they announced Google Buzz – is rather outweighed by Google’s irritating policy around Google Apps accounts not linking properly with @gmail.com accounts.

David Johnston
commenting at February 10th, 2010 at 12:07pm

James: they discuss the Google Apps account thing in TWiG 28 at about 1h23m. Something to do with the two services being on separate domain authorities within Google’s network…

Steve Paget
commenting at February 10th, 2010 at 7:33pm

Weirdly, if you set up a Google Wave account, you get given yet another address (pagetworld@googlewave.com for me)

But it doesn’t seem to be a real email address at all. What on earth is going on?

James Masterton
commenting at February 15th, 2010 at 2:06pm

I’m dreading the day that they manage to merge the apps and vanilla Google accounts, as to bridge the gap between the two I have a Google Apps account AND a google account that both use my “main” email address as the login.

Curiously this doesn’t seem to confuse my Nexus One, even though the passwords for the two are slightly different. Hence email and address book etc. syncs to the Apps login but stuff like Latitude data is automatically scoped to the identically named Google account. I still can’t use Buzz though as that only works through Gmail and if I try to access mail through the Google account it tells me to start the process of creating a gmail username.

Anyway, the Nexus One is amazing, would not be without it. Seems odd that there is no native app that talks to your Google Reader subscriptions.

Weekly Round Up | Barry McGee
commenting at February 15th, 2010 at 5:47pm

[...] As an iPhone user of two years, I was interested to read of James Cridland’s account of 24 hours with a Google Nexus One [...]

James
commenting at February 16th, 2010 at 10:43am

StreamFurious is probably the best radio streaming app I’ve used so far – http://www.streamfurious.com – plays Shoutcast/Icecast mp3 streams and has a bunch of presets built in.

Paul M
commenting at February 21st, 2010 at 2:04pm

I believe the Nexus is currently using the N95/3G iPlayer video sourced from BBC Redux (and thus auto-trimmed). This is a temporary measure and a proper h264 version that Android can handle is on the way.

Four months with a Google Nexus One - James Cridland
commenting at June 21st, 2010 at 10:51pm

[...] Back in February, I breathlessly blogged about my first 24 hours with my Google Nexus One. [...]

Make more internal storage space on Android - James Cridland
commenting at July 23rd, 2011 at 7:17pm

[...] you’ll know, I have a Google Nexus One Android phone. I quite liked it after 24 hours, I liked it more after four months, and then discovered alternative ROMS later. I’m now using [...]

Leave a comment

Here's my commenting policy