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‘Junkware’ comes standard on Verizon, T-Mobile smart phones

Posted on July 17th, 2010 at 22:57 by John Sinteur in category: Google -- Write a comment

[Quote]:

The Droid X comes loaded with several nonstandard applications for Google’s Android, most of which cannot be removed.

Among the phone’s so-called junkware is a Blockbuster video app and a demo for an Electronic Arts game called Need for Speed: Shift.

And because the droid is “open”, it cannot be removed.

[Quote]:

The software—a discordant melange of the not-so-fresh Android 2.1 and various bits of the Blur “social networking” interface from Motorola’s lower-end Android phones—is the shudder-inducing poster child for the horrors that can occur when most hardware companies try to make software. It’s ugly, scattershot, and confusing. It feels almost malicious.

[..]

The creeping feeling that Android is the new Windows becomes an overwhelming sensation the first time you boot up Droid X. Seven sprawling desktop screens, littered with widgets, oodles of little programs—the vast majority of which you probably don’t want or need. It’s overwhelming and utterly incomprehensible if you’re not the kind of person who’s seen at least two non-JJ Abrams Star Trek movies. The minutes lost to clearing them to get to a reasonably clean desktop, one press-and-hold-and-swipe gesture at a time, brought me back to the sullen days of removing crapware from whiny relatives’ Sony Vaios. Breathtaking hardware, filled to the brim with crap. Why would Motorola make this the first impression of its phone? Stuttering and confusion?

[..]

Software kneecaps this phone at nearly every corner. It makes the sizzling hardware look bad in the process. Watching this phone sputter, which it does occasionally for the even most menial of tasks, like opening the apps menu, feels more egregiously tortuous than normal, given its prodigious size and weight. It’s brain-stabbingly maddening if you actually know what’s inside of all that. (Verizon and Motorola would no doubt like me to you remind the build I’ve been using is not quite final, so performance could improve, but it seems like a systemic issue with Android 2.1. Android 2.2, with its massive speed boost and other perks, won’t be available for this phone until “late summer.”)

  1. Did I actually see the term “smart phone” in the title? Doesn’t sound very smart to me.

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