Motorola DROID A855 Android Phone

By Top Reviews - Last updated: Wednesday, March 3, 2010 - Save & Share - 7 Reviews

Amazon.com Product Description
The first Android-powered phone for Verizon Wireless, the 3G-enabled Motorola DROID smartphone offers a full package of powerful mobile connectivity–from easy access to all your social networks and viewing of full Web sites to spoken turn-by-turn directions thanks to the new Google Maps with Navigation Beta app. One of the thinnest full-QWERTY slider phones available, the Motorola DROID also features a high-resolution 3.7-inch touchscreen display and a virtual onscreen keyboard that auto-rotates depending on the phone’s orientation. And you’ll be able to capture high-resolution images and DVD-quality videos on the go with its 5-megapixel camera with flash.

The Motorola DROID offers the powerful Android 2.0 operating system, fast and reliable Verizon Wireless 3G connectivity, and a wealth of Google Mobile services–including the new Google Maps with Navigation app. With integrated Google technology, the Motoro… More >>

Motorola DROID A855 Android Phone

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7 Responses to “Motorola DROID A855 Android Phone”

Comment from blekenbleu
Time March 4, 2010 at 12:42 am

pro: bright and shiny

cons: not a phone, too thick to fit credit card slot of a shredder

The Droid is probably best considered an overweight flash drive with bluetooth.

It has no controls worthy of the name.

One might fantasize that a stylus could offer an illusion of control,

but iPod/iPhone reviews suggest that styluses are effectively incompatible with capacitive touch screens.

A phone should have a grip, place to speak and place listen, so zero for three.

Fully charged before turning off: two days later the battery was flat.

This appears to be related to (and can be repeated by) selecting full power down

while in airplane mode, then storing in the Verizon holster,

which by the way has cutouts which in no way correspond with connectors.

We have seen the battery go from fully charged to flat over night in this way.

Leaving the Droid in sleep mode, on the other hand, barely discharges the battery.

For dependable wireless communications (that is why you chose Verizon, right?),

you will need to also carry a real cell phone. Voice communications are

nearly unintelligible, mostly resembling grunts and mumbles.

Droid Wi-Fi appears to confuse our NETGEAR WGR614v6;

for the initial connection each day we now have to power that wireless router off and on

to re-enable 802.11g access for any of our wireless devices.

If you are the sort of person who prefers their SLR with a battery grip

or appreciates why real typists chose the IBM Executive to Selectric,

then move along, nothing to see here.

The LCD seems quite nice until your eyes tire of focusing on things no more than 8 inches away.
Rating: 3 / 5

Comment from trastevere
Time March 4, 2010 at 1:07 am

Democracy in America (and elsewhere) is under threat by corporate domination. The Supreme Court (through its conservative majority) decided on Jan. 21 to allow giant corporations and other special interests unlimited economic influence in elections. The power to control information is, in the end, the power to control the future. The rich and powerful already have too much influence in Washington. This new rule (supported only by so-called conservatives!) will give them much much more.

What does this have to do with Verizon, and the Droid?

Some Verizon products and services are pretty good. But if you give Verizon your money, you are threatening the future of the United States. That’s because Verizon is a key supporter of the groups that organize the Tea Party movement.

Verizon doesn’t support this movement because it shares their agenda. It has a different agenda, one that has something to do with band widths and other tech issues. It only wants to get certain politicians elected because it wants greater freedom to dominate its markets. In other words, it’s using the Tea Party movement as a private lobby– exploiting and corrupting its aims.

If you want your government to be strong, let Verizon know (through your consumer choices) that you won’t tolerate them exploiting urgent American problems as tools for their own corporate ends.

Rating: 4 / 5

Comment from escalation
Time March 4, 2010 at 3:22 am

First of all, this review is based on my personal experience. This is not just review of the product but also some experience with VW services. Since this phone is exclusive so the carrier service is part of the overall product experience I believe.

Here are what I care about when select phones:

carrier service quality

product quality (user interface, build quality, functionality, etc)

international roaming

I waited for the droid but I got iphone 3GS (2 of them now, one for me and one for the wife) after I delt with VW rep. When I asked the VW rep if I could see one that is powered one for demo. the guy told me one word ‘NO’ and walked away. Then I immediately drove to the nearby ATT store. While at ATT store, I got warmly greeted. the girl asked me what’s the purpose of my visit and put me on the list. while I am waiting, she offered me some water. then in about 2 minutes, a rep is ready. Does VW have better network coverage? probably yes but better coverage doesn’t mean better service overall.

Another thing I am concerning about is since most of my friends are using iphone, so switch to VW will cause higher phone bill and not be able to stay in touch( I assume even the same Apps e.g. ping! is available on Droid, it probably won’t be compatible between iphone version)

I think iphone has better build quality overall. it has the solid feeling. the UI is extremely easy to use. Droid has it’s advantage too. multitasking is my favorite. turn by turn GPS is another one and higher resolution is very attractive as well. It’s all about personal preference I guess.

International roaming might not be a concern for most of Americans. however, I do travel from time to time and I need GSM since this is most available mobile network around world.

So overall, I think iphone fits me. JB it and it will even fit better. :)

Rating: 3 / 5

Comment from Book buyer
Time March 4, 2010 at 4:46 am

Not a very good phone and Android is a work in progress.

The physical keyboard is unusable and the onscreen keyboard is not much better. iPhone keyboard is much better especially in wide screen.

Laggy! You can’t even scroll the home screen without lag.

You can only install a few hundred MB of apps. Thats all. Seriously.

Touch screen not as sensitive or accurate as the iPhone.

Syncing of data and multimedia not very good other than basic Google services.

Can’t do data and voice at the same time. Thats a Verizon issue though. Verizon also charges a fortune if you cancel your contract early so you better be really sure you want this phone.
Rating: 1 / 5

Comment from Nikki D
Time March 4, 2010 at 6:38 am

EMAIL:I am very disappointed in this crappy phone. I ditched my blackberry for the droid which was a huge mistake. This phone does not work well with any email accounts other than gmail. I have a yahoo and bellsouth account. The droid notify’s you that you have an email only when it wants to (which is not very often.) Most of the time your email doesn’t even push through to the droid. The droid also forwards lots and lots of spam from your spam folder on all email accounts even though it blocked on a computer. When you send an email from the droid it often sits in the outgoing mail box for a while before the email is actually sent. This phone also does not forward attachments. There is no alert that tells you that you have a missed call (for example: flashing light.) If there is such a feature it does not work. If you just happend to pick up the phone and unlock the screen there is a small icon that tells you that you missed a call.

INTERNET: The internet experience is no where near as fast as verizon advertises. But over all the internet experience is no horrible but is sure isn’t great.

CAMERA: The camera does not take pictures at all if the area has low light (must be very well lit area.) Once you take the picture it takes a long time for the camera to snap the picture.

APPEARANCE: The droid is very clunky and heavy making it awkward to use; although the pull out key board and large screen is a plus.

APLICATIONS: Android market is the only place that you can download apps from. The majority of the apps are pointless and useless or just plain defective.

Overall: I would not recommend this phone to anyone. This is the WORST so called smart phone that I have ever used. I am going back to blackberry as soon as I get the chance. I seriously think that the majority of the positive reviews are coming from motorola/verizon paid reviewers or non experienced smart phone users.

Rating: 1 / 5

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