Enjoying my nexus one.

Awhile back I purchased an HTC Hero. It was my first Android handst, and I was thoroughly satisfied by the Android experience. Inevitably, I ended up returning the phone, for several reasons:
1) The Hero’s SenseUI was custom built on top of Android. There was no set date that the Hero would be getting OS updates (like Android 2.0). Until recently, neither HTC nor Sprint would say whether or not they would be pushing the update at all.
2) It was a very solid phone and fluid user experience, but the internally, the phone was running last-gen hardware. It’s not that big of a deal, but I want to be able to purchase something top of the line that will be sufficient for most of the 2-year contract period.

With that being said, here are what I believe to be the main advantages of the N1. It is running the latest version of Android of any phone on the market (Android 2.1). The hardware is the best of it’s kind on the market (snapdragon).

The touchscreen is slightly larger than the iPhone, and it’s still a very slim phone. It has one of the best cameras of cell phones (5 megapixel), and out of the box supports standard things like picture messaging, copy+paste, stereo bluetooth, gps, and video which first gen iPhone users can’t even do. The GPS Navigation software is standard on Android phones, unlike the iPhone whose software for turn-by-turn is added to monthly service or the TomTom software’s initial costs are about $100.

Overall, I think that the N1 is the first all-around Android phone that rivals side-by-side any other smartphone out right now. The only Android disadvantage is the lack of quality apps, which should hopefully change over time, remember, the iPhone has a headstart by a few years.

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