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Motorola Milestone (Droid) review

in Smartphones

Verdict

A good list of specifications and a lovely screen can't quite make up for patchy performance and below par battery life

Review Date: 14 Jan 2010

Reviewed By: Jonathan Bray

Price when reviewed: £50, on a £35.00 per month, 18 months contract.

Overall Rating
4 stars out of 6

Features & Design
4 stars out of 6

Value for Money
3 stars out of 6

Ease of Use
4 stars out of 6


And the hardware, though powerful on paper, is less than stellar in the flesh. The chassis is all sharp, hard edges and feels less than comfortable to hold. The sliding mechanism for the keyboard feels stiff and slow, and the keyboard itself, with its flat, indistinct keys, is deeply average. The touch sensitive buttons below the screen work fine, but we'd prefer physical keys to press.

The highlight is undoubtedly the screen. It's slightly larger than the iPhone 3GS's display at 3.7in, and more than double the resolution at 480 x 854 – which makes text and web pages easier on the eye. Its 5-megapixel camera, equipped with autofocus and a dual-LED flash, takes decent shots too, and there's nothing missing on the communications front either. Some might bemoan the lack of FM tuner and internal storage (the 8GB you get is all on Micro SD), but those are the only weak spots as far as specifications are concerned.

Motorola Milestone (Droid)

But we can't shake the feeling that the Motorola Milestone could have been so much more. And that feeling is confirmed by unimpressive performance figures. To start with, battery life is below average: we measured 50 per cent remaining after 24-hours (rounded to the nearest 10 per cent), which puts the Milestone on an equal footing with the iPhone 3GS and behind rivals such as the T-Mobile Pulse and HTC Hero.

And we measured disappointing browser performance too. Loading the BBC home page took an average of 18 seconds, where most other Android handsets manage around 13 seconds. Add to that the fact that general responsiveness while panning and zooming web pages doesn't feel particularly smooth, and you have one seriously underwhelming handset.

It's expensive, too, with no UK network deal yet announced, so if you're desperate for the benefits that Android 2.0 update brings we'd counsel patience. The HTC Hero on Orange will soon be updated to the latest version, as inevitably will other existing handsets in the fullness of time. Or you could, of course, just go and buy an iPhone 3GS – which remains the easiest to use and snappiest smartphone around.

Author: Jonathan Bray

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User comments

Proxy!!???!!

Why is it that you've never mentioned the lack of Proxy support on Android? Many Universities and Enterprise business users have a completely useless wifi radio when at work/campus and you've not mentioned this rather glaring hole in function on any of your Android phone reviews. I bet there isn't a single other smartphone operating system that ommits this feature. I love my Hero but it's been neutered.

By hjl4354 on 14 Jan 2010

I;m going to be covering this in more detail in the RWC column soon, but in the meantime if you google it you should be able to find a downloadable Android proxy app.

By PaulOckenden on 14 Jan 2010

There is no app or satisfactory fix that i can find after 3 months of intermittent web trawling. Some people have tried using anycut but that solution has no support for secured proxy access.

Here's the issue logged with the Google Code site that seems to be unheeded: http://code.google.com/p/android/issue
s/detail?id=1273

Even if someone does manage to write an app, you have to admit that it's should be a built in function.

Anyhoo, i'll stop moaning, I look forward to reading your column.

By hjl4354 on 14 Jan 2010

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