- Oct 9, 1999
- 9,140
- 67
- 91
So I picked up a pair of Atrix(WTH is the plural of Atrix?) from Radio Shack yesterday morning, random thoughts and observations.
First thing I noticed is that it is a hard plastic style design, and slippery- comparable to the iPhone or Galaxy S parts. Second thing I noticed is that it is almost all screen- a plus for some but it gave me the impression of being very easy to shatter if dropped(not planning on testing that theory out anytime soon).
Was a bit surprised that there was no mention of it being a Tegra2 part anywhere, not on the box or anywhere on the phone. The only real indicator that it has anything outside of a normal run of the mill mobile processor is the Motorola logo when booting has dual core written underneath. Guess nV isn't pushing branding too hard yet.
The box is fairly plain and comes with a standard micro USB charger and a HDMI cable for the phone. Nothing spectacular.
After boot and the normal Android setup you get into the fairly typical looking Motoblur interface, I don't find this nearly as offensive looking as some but it is certainly a Moto branded experience. Start moving things around and the first thing that stuck out to me was how incredibly fast everything scrolled all the time even with all the default Moto BS widgets all over the 7 different screens. UI scrolling speed hasn't ever been a big deal to me, and it still isn't, but when running a full Blur interface you get used to having hiccups.
I was planning on rooting the phone to uninstall all the typical junk that AT&T loads onto their parts, but was surprised that I didn't need to, it just lets you from the normal app management section as if they were something you DLd yourself.
Tegra Zone isn't up yet which kind of sucks, outside of benchmarks at the moment there really isn't anything to show off what your phone can do. Performance on the phone has been stellar in everything I've thrown at it- including playing back FLACs using PowerAmp while browsing- totally smooth. Flash performance overall has been very solid as well, Ninja Kiwi made things slow down a lot but it's the only stumbling block I've seen.
Also ran over to AT&T and picked up the media bundle($190). Comes with a dock, cheap as all hell Bluetooth mouse, OK keyboard and tiny little remote. When I first tried to get it setup it was glitchy to the point of not being usable. I got stuck on a black screen and couldn't get the webtop interface to load at all. Got irritated with it and gave up. Figured I'd try it again this morning and it just worked flawlessly. I'm posting this from the webtop and now that it is working it is fairly slick. The custom Linux build seems decent and 'tablet-esque' with somewhat limited functionality if it were viewed as a laptop replacement(this is the same as the laptop dock OS) but as a media based device it is actually rather enjoyable. Playing Angry Birds and some of the other games on the big screen is entertaining. One issue I really don't like at the moment is that it is limited to 720p(or 1280x1024)- That is something they need to address. The sharpness just isn't there at this resolution.
Screen quality on the phone, btw, is typical LCD fare these days. Pixel density is easily in the solid range with the only real issue being certain color combinations just look terrible(yellow text on black background is cringe worthy). Under most uses it is comparable to the iP4 screen, iP4 having a slight edge, way behind the SAMOLED screens unfortunately.
Overall, very pleased with the device. A SAMOLED screen and Tegra Zone being available with some tweaks to the Webtop would have had this about perfect for me.
First thing I noticed is that it is a hard plastic style design, and slippery- comparable to the iPhone or Galaxy S parts. Second thing I noticed is that it is almost all screen- a plus for some but it gave me the impression of being very easy to shatter if dropped(not planning on testing that theory out anytime soon).
Was a bit surprised that there was no mention of it being a Tegra2 part anywhere, not on the box or anywhere on the phone. The only real indicator that it has anything outside of a normal run of the mill mobile processor is the Motorola logo when booting has dual core written underneath. Guess nV isn't pushing branding too hard yet.
The box is fairly plain and comes with a standard micro USB charger and a HDMI cable for the phone. Nothing spectacular.
After boot and the normal Android setup you get into the fairly typical looking Motoblur interface, I don't find this nearly as offensive looking as some but it is certainly a Moto branded experience. Start moving things around and the first thing that stuck out to me was how incredibly fast everything scrolled all the time even with all the default Moto BS widgets all over the 7 different screens. UI scrolling speed hasn't ever been a big deal to me, and it still isn't, but when running a full Blur interface you get used to having hiccups.
I was planning on rooting the phone to uninstall all the typical junk that AT&T loads onto their parts, but was surprised that I didn't need to, it just lets you from the normal app management section as if they were something you DLd yourself.
Tegra Zone isn't up yet which kind of sucks, outside of benchmarks at the moment there really isn't anything to show off what your phone can do. Performance on the phone has been stellar in everything I've thrown at it- including playing back FLACs using PowerAmp while browsing- totally smooth. Flash performance overall has been very solid as well, Ninja Kiwi made things slow down a lot but it's the only stumbling block I've seen.
Also ran over to AT&T and picked up the media bundle($190). Comes with a dock, cheap as all hell Bluetooth mouse, OK keyboard and tiny little remote. When I first tried to get it setup it was glitchy to the point of not being usable. I got stuck on a black screen and couldn't get the webtop interface to load at all. Got irritated with it and gave up. Figured I'd try it again this morning and it just worked flawlessly. I'm posting this from the webtop and now that it is working it is fairly slick. The custom Linux build seems decent and 'tablet-esque' with somewhat limited functionality if it were viewed as a laptop replacement(this is the same as the laptop dock OS) but as a media based device it is actually rather enjoyable. Playing Angry Birds and some of the other games on the big screen is entertaining. One issue I really don't like at the moment is that it is limited to 720p(or 1280x1024)- That is something they need to address. The sharpness just isn't there at this resolution.
Screen quality on the phone, btw, is typical LCD fare these days. Pixel density is easily in the solid range with the only real issue being certain color combinations just look terrible(yellow text on black background is cringe worthy). Under most uses it is comparable to the iP4 screen, iP4 having a slight edge, way behind the SAMOLED screens unfortunately.
Overall, very pleased with the device. A SAMOLED screen and Tegra Zone being available with some tweaks to the Webtop would have had this about perfect for me.