Some of the demerits include its pocket tugging weight. The Droid weights 5.96 oz, or 25% more than the iPhone. In addition to pearl jewelry the heft, the phone has angular, pointy corners, a departure from the rounded edges of most phones. And the camera promises far more than it delivers.
But that said, here’s a point-by-point rundown of the pearl necklace Droid phone’s features after the first hours of trial use.
Display: The 3.7 inch touchscreen is vivid and uses the swipe and poke navigation with a vibrating touch confirmation. Motorola says the screen has multi-touch capability (pinch or spread finger control for zooming in and out) but the feature is not activated yet. And though the screen boasts more than twice the resolution of the iPhone, the picture wasn’t dramatically better. Keyboard: The full Qwerty keypad slides out with a firm thumb push and clicks into place. The sliding movement feels solid and reveals an ample typing surface. While sliders typically add shell pearl jewelry more bulk, the Droid succeeds in giving users a great keypad without losing the slender form. Design: Sleek but not quite elegant, the Droid has a black monolith appearance. The metal top is slightly shorter than the plastic keyboard bottom, giving the phone a distinct under bite.