by Jason Young - @jsnyng on March 23, 2010
It has been months since I’ve updated this site. Why? My experience with Android was an absolute dud. The MyTouch 3G was not a phone that could compete with the iPhone 3GS. The Droid looked like a formidable opponent, but there were several shortcomings on the device I couldn’t live with. The Nexus One with its super sexy specs still runs a vanilla Android experience and is still plagued with the dreadful experience that is the Android Market. Android devices just haven’t looked that appealing until today.
Hello sexy! Today Sprint announced its first 4G WiMax capable phone, and it is called the Evo 4G made by HTC. This device has some absolutely amazing specs (pictured below) and is coupled with HTC’s SenseUI. No pricing on the device has been announced yet, but if it is available on Sprint’s $69.99 unlimited voice, data, and text plan, my iPhone 3GS may just end up on Craigslist.
by Jason Young - @jsnyng on August 12, 2009
We have a clear, indisputable winner in this category. If you own an iPhone 3GS and are not plugging in for more juice a couple of times a day, you really must not be using your phone very much. I’m sure you’ve seen the graphic to the right more than once. When the iPhone 3GS was my daily carry device, I would chuckle that within the first hour of waking up I would be down to 80% just checking Twitter, my Google Reader feeds, and seeing what my friends on Facebook were doing.
In order to get a full work day’s worth of use out of the iPhone 3GS’s battery, I had a routine I had to follow which was quite monotonous after day two. When I would leave the house for the office, I would turn off WiFi and turn on Bluetooth and Location Services. When I would get to the office, I would turn off Bluetooth and Location Services (GPS). When I would leave for the day, I would turn Bluetooth and Location Services back on. Upon arriving at home, those two services would be turned off again and back on with the WiFi. I had to do that to just get through a 10 hour work day.
I deliberately put the MyTouch 3G to the test today. I loaded Twidget Lite as a background process to check my @jsnyng Twitter account every 15 minutes. I loaded Twidroid as a background process to check my @AndroidChal Twitter account every 15 minutes. Moving on to email settings, I cranked up the Exchange ActiveSync settings to notify me as messages arrived. Total talk time on the phone today was 129 minutes. I downloaded a couple of podcasts, checked the weather, played with Sherpa, and sent a few emails and SMS messages. It’s nearly 8:30PM here on the east coast of the US as I’m typing this, and I still have slightly over 20% of the battery left. If I had put an iPhone 3GS under that load (if it allowed background apps to run), I wouldn’t have made it past 2PM at the latest without a completely unusable device due to a dead battery. Chalk this win up to the MyTouch 3G.
by Jason Young - @jsnyng on August 11, 2009
I’m really looking forward to reading my one-month, three-month, six-month, and one-year posts on this same subject. For you to understand more about my perspective on these posts, let me tell you a little about myself. To say that I am a gadget guru would be an understatement. My addiction and fascination with technology knows no bounds. When I was in the 3rd grade way back in 1983, I sat down in front of an Apple IIe and got hooked on the technology drug.
I did not get the very first iPhone, but I did sit in line for 14 hours to purchase the iPhone 3G. I live-blogged the event and was even featured on Leo Laporte’s 24-hours of worldwide iPhone coverage. The iPhone 3G is an awesome device. When the iPhone 3GS was announced, I blocked out my calendar for launch day and went and bought two, one for me and one for my wife. The iPhone 3GS is an amazing piece of hardware with a phenomenal underlying operating system and a plethora of applications for the vast majority of my needs. My one and ONLY complaint is that here in the United States, it is exclusively tied to AT&T. The video below accurately sums up my opinion of AT&T.
Now that I have paid my $175 contract cancellation fee with AT&T, I have moved on to the T-Mobile MyTouch 3G (a.k.a. HTC Magic). This device has an awful lot of potential. The MyTouch 3G itself is no iPhone-killer… yet. It definitely has the potential to be. The Android OS will soon (next 12-18 months) grossly outsell the iPhone OS. Yes, that is my prediction. Write down the date. That crazy @jsnyng said Android is going to outsell iPhone. It is. Why? There will be over 20 Android powered handsets built by various different manufacturers in the next year on all of the major cellular carriers by around the world.
There will still be just one iPhone. There will still be the “walled-garden” known as the App Store for iPhone. Those restrictions do not apply to Android devices. That alone is huge, but also being an operating system tightly integrated and developed by Google are huge positives as well. Below are my initial random thoughts about Android and the MyTouch 3G.
- The MyTouch keyboard is not nearly as nice as the iPhone. The HTC add-on keyboard is very close, but it’s not quite there yet.
- The screen on the MyTouch is not in the same league as the iPhone. The capacitive touch screen is good, but it really doesn’t compare to the super-sensitive, well-spaced capacitive touch screen of the iPhone.
- The phone works. The phone works. The phone works. Call clarity is very good whether on 3G or EDGE. Call quality with 2 bars of service on T-Mobile has been better than 4 bars of service on AT&T.
- Background apps absolutely rocks. Notifications in the background without having to use a hokey, piss-poorly designed push system is nice.
- Android Market is not nearly as mature as the iPhone App Store… yet.
- Google Voice integration directly into the handset replacing the dialer and SMS functions is the best thing since sliced bread.
- Android really needs a GREAT Twitter client. The best clients I have tried (twidroid – free, iTweet – $2.99) don’t even come close to the 5th or 6th best iPhone Twitter clients.
- The MyTouch 3G really needs a firmware update soon. I am on the very first revision of a week one phone. There is a little bugginess here and there and some very annoying lag time when switching between applications on occasion.
- Widgets are cool. I really love my WeatherBug, QuickTweet, and Music widgets.
- The processor is a 528Mhz snappy little rascal (when it’s not bogged down with something wonky going on in the background). I’m ready for a 480×800 screen with a dual core 1Ghz+ processor, 1GB RAM, and a multi-core GPU (Don’t be surprised to see something like that before Christmas 2010).
So those are my “feelings” on the subject just 7 days in. Let’s see how they progress or digress over the next few weeks as I prepare to write my one-month findings.
by Jason Young - @jsnyng on August 9, 2009

This is my first attempt at blogging to my Wordpress MU site directly from the MyTouch 3G. I saw an app in the Android Market called WPtoGo which purports to allow me to publish here directly from the phone. We shall see how well it works once I hit the publish button. In the meantime, stop drooling on your keyboard over that Sam Adams SummerAle (assuming the picture shows up) .