I’m sorry I didn’t come up with a more catchy title and hopefully this won’t be another plan ol’ comparison between these two phones. What, you say? Why would this one be different? Well, I own both phones. More specifically, I got my G1 on launch day and have loved it ever since. At the beginning of April, we were on family vacation and I dropped my G1 with such force, I broke it. I had the G1 BEFORE the iPhone…
Grief
I found myself going through the “Seven Stages of Grief” over the phone. This was the first smartphone I had bought myself and my first phone with a real dataplan.
Typically, the seven (7) stages of grief are described as:
– Shock or Disbelief
– Denial
– Anger
– Bargaining
– Guilt
– Depression
– Acceptance and HopeSometimes, people speak of five (5) stages of grieving, putting together:
– Shock/Disbelief and Denial
– Bargaining and Guilt
Depression
I was using a crappy Samsung phone during my “depression” phase. I then learned that the G2 might be coming out this summer so I didn’t want to spend over $200+ for a new G1.
Acceptance and Hope
I began my search for a 1st gen / 2g iPhone. I wanted to jailbreak and unlock it so I can use it on T-Mobile’s network. I was able to find via Facebook from a friend and we struck a deal and I got a new (used) iPhone.
It’s been about a week and I have been playing around with the iPhone a lot. It is jailbroken and unlocked and I am able to use it with my T-Mobile G1 account just fine.
Now that I have both, I feel that I can give a good comparison between the two. Furthermore, I had my G1 first, before I had any iPhone experience.
T-Mobile G1
I loved this phone. Here’s a list in particular order of things I really liked:
- Sliding Menus
- Run multiple apps
- Google Gmail/Calendar/Contacts Syncing
- Online community
- Google Maps, Tracks, and Latitude
- Could use most web-based iPhone apps.
- More utility based apps in market
- Cool GPS apps
And here’s some things I did not like about it:
- It would “hang” switching back from using the web browser.
- Too many “Tip Calculators” in the market.
- No way to see if an upgrade to an once free app now costs money
- Battery life, battery life.
- No Exchange support.
- Did I mention Battery life?
- Not able to integrate with iTunes
- Wouldn’t work with my office’s Corporate Wifi, (could only get Edge in the building).
The G1 was otherwise a killer phone, in my opinion. The sound quality was good. There were plenty of apps that changed default behavior. I liked the keyboard a lot, but I wish it did have an iPhone like keyboard; it was somewhat cumbersome to slide the keyboard open and wait for the screen to refresh with the new orientation. There were plenty of fitness-type apps, too. Each one improved upon the previous.
2G iPhone
To be clear, I now think the iPhone is also a killer phone. A list of my likes:
- Seems much faster than the G1
- The internal memory is shared between apps, iTunes, photos, etc
- iTunes!
- All my iPod accessories work!
- The store is easy to navigate and sort between free and paid apps
- Twitterfon!
- Supports Microsoft Exchange via OWA
- WiFi works great.
And my list of dislikes:
- Only one Exchange account can be configured.
- Browser doesn’t default to “mobile” site
I originally had some apps on my list of “likes” that I removed since it is only a matter of time before the Android version of the apps start showing up.
And that’s about it. I realize it looks like I like the iPhone better than the G1, but that isn’t the case. The way I see it, the iPhone has been out way longer and has way more exsposure than the G1 and Google Android in general.
Verdict
Both phones are killer in my opinion. But I do like Android bettern than the iPhone OS. And that might be since it’s linux based and just sort of feels right. But I am enjoying my iPhone and I do plan on getting a G2 but I may not be in as big as a hurry as I was before.