I am one of those smartphone customers that did not buy an iPhone because of experience I've had with AT&T's spotty coverage in the region I live in. I had heard Verizon would have a phone that would perform like the iPhone. Prior to the release date of this phone, Several days berfore the Droid was released, I Googled the Internet and found many articles published in a rush to be the first. Some articles were full of hopefull speculation by people looking for an alternative to the iPhone or the Pre, while the iPhone paradigm was well represented by disparaging comments adamantly proclaiming no phone could ever be as good as the iPhone.
November 6th, the release date for the Droid, arrived and I took my place in a line waiting for the store to open three hours early. Armed with as much information as I could glean from naysayers and hopefull speculators, I was escorted into the store by a courteous and knowledgeable representative. The store was full of helpful and knowledgeable representatives who had received their Droids the day before. Many had not slept the prior night, while they obsessively learned the advanced capabilities of their Droids and installed apps from the Android market site. There was excitement in the store as sales representatives showed off the features and apps of their personal phones with the customers. I didn't wait to get home to try my Droid. I sat in the parking lot, trying to think up excuses why I might be late for a meeting I had sheduled, as I explored the features of my new Droid. The phone was so intuitive I had mastered and setup the desired features in less than ten minutes and I made it to my scheduled appointment on time.
Verizon's Droid is an impressive alternative to the current leader in the smartphone market, iPhone. It's Android 2.0 operating system by Google, offers a large bright high-resolution 854p x 480p screen, an open app market, Google Maps with navigation for free, and multitasking capabilities that may provoke envy in some iPhone users.
November 6th, the release date for the Droid, arrived and I took my place in a line waiting for the store to open three hours early. Armed with as much information as I could glean from naysayers and hopefull speculators, I was escorted into the store by a courteous and knowledgeable representative. The store was full of helpful and knowledgeable representatives who had received their Droids the day before. Many had not slept the prior night, while they obsessively learned the advanced capabilities of their Droids and installed apps from the Android market site. There was excitement in the store as sales representatives showed off the features and apps of their personal phones with the customers. I didn't wait to get home to try my Droid. I sat in the parking lot, trying to think up excuses why I might be late for a meeting I had sheduled, as I explored the features of my new Droid. The phone was so intuitive I had mastered and setup the desired features in less than ten minutes and I made it to my scheduled appointment on time.
Verizon's Droid is an impressive alternative to the current leader in the smartphone market, iPhone. It's Android 2.0 operating system by Google, offers a large bright high-resolution 854p x 480p screen, an open app market, Google Maps with navigation for free, and multitasking capabilities that may provoke envy in some iPhone users.

Each screen will display a dozen thumbnail previews of Web pages that are crisp enough to be recognizable, and Google Maps satellite imagery dazzles. The Droid flies with blazing speed that matches the fluidity of the iPhone. The browser, like that of the iPhone 3GS, is a joy to use. Sites designed for use on mobile devices seem to be intantly accessable. The Droid keyboard, makes apps, such as instant messengers and word processors much easier to work with since all the pixels are available for viewing and editing instead of consuming a significant portion of the screen by an on-screen keyboard.
While many people will still prefer the iPhone's entertainment apps, Android’s open sourcing could make it a more appealing media platform than the iPhone, since developers won't have the same concerns as the Apple aproval process. Some iPhone devotees still feel the iPhone OS is still more elegant and intuitive. The Android OS is solid, with features similar to desktop computing shrunken to phone size.
This posting is not meant to persuade people to change services or phones or in any way suggest one phone is far superior to another, but rather to share with my many friends my experience with an impressive product that offers a real solution and real choice.
