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Boring, more of the same diatribe.
DROID may not have AMOLED, but it does have 26,000 more pixels. Some have commented that, while the AMOLED is richer and more saturated, the pixel density of the DROID screen provides a more pleasing output.
I do believe that the N1 hurts the DROID's potential sales figures, but at the end of the day, when DROID gets 2.1, the only thing that'll separate the two are the processors, which aren't that different in performance.
What I think the N1 does is threaten all of Google's partnerships, except with HTC. If GOOG allows Motorola to be the partner that puts out the Enterprise Nexus One or the Nexus Two, then perhaps, they'll repair their partnership. But it's obvious, clear and reported that Google has strained relationships with all their partners (sans HTC) with the release of this phone. GOOG has to do some serious damage control.
At the end of the day, right now, their new model for distributing their technology hasn't been a super success. Customer service issues, T-Mo offering ZERO support to the phone even if you have a contract, etc. It seems to have been more damaging than beneficial. Only time will tell though...
Boring, more of the same diatribe.
DROID may not have AMOLED, but it does have 26,000 more pixels. Some have commented that, while the AMOLED is richer and more saturated, the pixel density of the DROID screen provides a more pleasing output.
I do believe that the N1 hurts the DROID's potential sales figures, but at the end of the day, when DROID gets 2.1, the only thing that'll separate the two are the processors, which aren't that different in performance.
What I think the N1 does is threaten all of Google's partnerships, except with HTC. If GOOG allows Motorola to be the partner that puts out the Enterprise Nexus One or the Nexus Two, then perhaps, they'll repair their partnership. But it's obvious, clear and reported that Google has strained relationships with all their partners (sans HTC) with the release of this phone. GOOG has to do some serious damage control.
At the end of the day, right now, their new model for distributing their technology hasn't been a super success. Customer service issues, T-Mo offering ZERO support to the phone even if you have a contract, etc. It seems to have been more damaging than beneficial. Only time will tell though...

Well hopefully they've strained relations with Samsung, because tbh Samsung can go <bleep> themselves.
Us poor Galaxy users have been left in the cold on android 1.5 forever - I don't want Samsung to get anymore of the android pie!
This happens to all phones with customized UI. Moto Cliq is stuck on 1.5 as well. Maybe Sense UI is up to 1.6, but 2.0 is still going to be slow on it.

This happens to all phones with customized UI. Moto Cliq is stuck on 1.5 as well. Maybe Sense UI is up to 1.6, but 2.0 is still going to be slow on it.
