Motorola hopes an upcoming raft of Android handsets will breathe new life into the cooling corpse of its mobile phone efforts. The company has made a promising start with the Dext.
The Dext smartphone is no beauty, but it does what it says on the tin, providing a solid Android experience, with some handy social-networking extras, packed up with a full QWERTY keyboard. It has some flaws, like widgets that can't quite get their act together and terrible call quality, but a snappy touchscreen and powerful operating system more than make up for its deficiencies.
It's all a Motoblur

For example, sign into your Facebook, Twitter, Last.fm and MySpace accounts, and the Dext will grab all your contacts, including their profile photos, and merge them with your Google account to fill up the phone's address book. We found that it did a great job of linking contacts across accounts, and it was ace to be able to sort our contacts by name or recent updates. We missed, however, a few of the simpler tweaks that make an address book easy to use. For example, when we had a contact with a company name and no personal name, the Dext listed it by phone number. That could be a real pain for business users.
Once you've given the Dext all of your account information, you can update your status in Facebook and tweet at the same time, as well as send messages to your contacts in any one of umpteen ways. Motorola has also created some widgets that display your social whirl on the home screen: You can see your status, your messages--including direct tweets, Facebook messages, emails and texts--and 'happenings' (a stream of all your contacts' recent posts).
It's all a big bundle of fun, if you're into that kind of thing, and it's helpful if you don't like to have to check your various networks separately. The widgets are fine but we'd have liked more room for the text, and we found the happenings sometimes strayed out of the correct chronological order.
As well as the social-networking gubbins, Motoblur also includes an online service. It's similar to Apple's MobileMe and Nokia's Ovi, not to mention a host of other offerings, providing a Web-based service that backs up your accounts and messages over the air. You can also track your phone by its GPS signal, and, if it's not somewhere you think you can find it, like your house or your local boozer, you can wipe it remotely too.
Android adventure
Other than the messaging and address-book tweaks, Motorola has left most of the Android user interface alone. That means there's no multi-touch support, so you can't zoom into photos or Web pages with a pinch of your fingers. We really missed this great feature, since it's so intuitive and accurate, especially for zooming in on Web pages full of tiny links. If you've never used multi-touch before, you may not miss it, though.
The Dext has access to the wonderful Android Market, which makes zillions of apps easy to find and install. That means the Dext has huge potential for growth, whether you're exploiting the infinite jukebox of Spotify or turning it into a Skype phone. Many of the apps are free, and, although they don't tend to be quite as slick as the apps available for the iPhone, the Android Market wins points for giving its developers more scope for creativity.
As well as its Android goodness, the Dext has solid specs, with a 5-megapixel camera, Wi-Fi and HSDPA for fast downloads over 3G. It comes with a 2GB memory card (it supports cards of up to 32GB) and a standard 3.5mm headphone jack so you can listen to your tunes on your own cans.
列印版本








Reader's Comments
Be the first to leave a comment on this page!
請先登入再使用此功能。