Rose colored glasses? I'm guessing the Droid won't drop calls like the iPhone does, nor will it have overheating or exploding issues like the iPhone did. There's a lot to like about the iPhone, but its not on a pedestal and its not a superstar. Its proponents are just very very vocal.
No, not rose-colored glasses - stone-cold sales figures:
1.) Over 21 million iPhones sold (as of Q2 2009)
2.) 100,000 apps available (as of Nov 4th, 2009)
3.) Over 2 billion apps downloaded (as of Sept 2009)
It's kind of like calling Britney Spears a superstar - you may not like her, but you can't deny that she's successful. For comparison, Motorola started selling the RAZR in 2003 and have sold 110 million units to date (they switched to the RAZR2 in 2007 according to Wikipedia). The problem is, they relied on the status quo and didn't keep up with technology - they should have released something like the Droid 3 or 4 years ago to stay ahead of the curve, but instead they were complacent. So now they have to compete with 100k apps and an existing userbase of 20 million iPhones, while selling an Android-based phone which only has 10k apps, costs the same as the iPhone, and has a similarly-priced service plan.
I think the Droid is a better phone (as far as the phone aspect goes), but it's going to be pretty hard to knock the iPhone from it's pedestal! I'm not saying it can't be done - case in point, Motorola sold 110 million RAZRS and then lost it all and almost dropped out of the mobile phone market - just that they have some very hard competition. People like easy. Having played with the Droid, I don't think that it's a smartphone I would recommend to my mom or my grandma, which leaves it to teens & young adults, and technically-minded people. Not saying the other demographics
couldn't use it, but when faced with a choice of that or the iPhone, I'd recommend the iPhone for sheer usability. Although it makes for a crappy phone
Additionally, from a user perspective, the iPhone is extremely easy to use. My grandma is like 85 and can use my iPhone, and yet it has enough sophistication to keep me interested. I'm a fanboy, but even I agree the iPhone is not without its quirks - my three biggest complains with my 3GS are (1) useless speakerphone, (2) terrible AT&T service, and (3) random shutdowns.
btw, regarding overheating - the Droid has a
metal vent on the rear of the phone :biggrin: