Phone designers are desperate to prove the technique of reinventing the wheel will work to outcompete the popular iPhone. Needless to say, most have failed.
Nevertheless, consumers have anticipated today's release of the Motorola Droid, offered on Verizon networks. The Droid is very intentionally meant to compete with any and all (excluding iTunes compatibility) of the iPhone's features including price points.
I was pretty sure the Droid would be the best thing we could get to an actual iPhone killer and yes, I was impressed by the phone and its marketing technique. Then I saw the Sony Ericsson Xperia X10. First, I'm surprised I'm lauding anything starting with "Sony Ericsson," but I have to say, they've really outshone their previous models with this new android phone.
The phone is, of course, a big touch surface with Wifi, bluetooth, you know, the works. I was impressed by the phone's inclusion of a wireless bluetooth headset which looks strikingly similar to a pair of headphones connected to an iPod shuffle.
I've always found it amusing these phone companies and products like the Zune need commercials whose feeling of having fun and being social need to be forcefully infused via the commercials rather than built around a following or naturally brewed from user experience. After all, the iPhone commercials were merely a few clips of people answering the phone from old black and white movies. Today, they've evolved into nothing more than a finger playing with the screen.
The popular Google Chrome browser has slowly gained its place in the browser market as light, fast, and frankly, heavily advertised browser specially …