Motorola Droid 4 Pretty Fine for a QWERTY Slider
I found little lag time taking pictures with the device, and
the video captured and played back footage in HD 1080p. I also liked what Motorola
did with its gallery app, offering a camera roll view of pictures users
uploaded to social networks such as Facebook and Twitter.
Unfortunately
for the Droid 4, I've been testing it on the heels of Motorola's Droid Maxx,
whichwith a 3,300mAh power supplyhas the best battery life I've ever seen or
experienced on any handset, let alone an Android phone. The Droid 4 has a 1,785mAh
power source, which puts it closer to the Droid Razr.
Even so, I
churned through the Droid 4's battery like butter during my 70-minute train
ride today, and had half a battery to show for it, with a good 6 hours left to
my workday. Not terrible, the Droid 3 has a 1,540mAh battery, but it's not
ideal. Now I have to wonder when the battery will die out on me; I did not
remember to bring a charger.
There is a lot
of preloaded software on this Droid 4. In addition to the requisite Google
appsGmail, YouTube, Google Maps and Latitudethere is music recommendation
engine MOG, video search engine VideoSurf and remote TV management app
Slingbox, none of which I have use for.
What I do find
useful and clever is Smart Actions, an app that lets users apply rules to
manage the smartphone. This app lets users program the phone to dim the display
when battery life gets low, launch Google Maps Navigation when users enter
their car, and silence phone ringers and alerts when users are at work and turn
them back on when they get home. It's a great tool for the professional
consumer.
Speaking of
work and professional consumers, the Droid 4 also offers government-grade
encryption for email, calendar and contacts.
For those road
warriors working somewhere that is not their home office, Motorola has also
preloaded Citrix Receiver for Android, which provides remote desktop
virtualization and access. Citrix GotoMeeting is also included for Web
conferencing.
Moreover, the
phone also hooks up to Motorola's Lapdock 500, which lets users treat the phone
like a laptop and access the Web via a Mozilla Firefox browser instantiation
for $299.97. The device also has 16GB of internal storage, expandable to 32GB
with a microSD card.
I recommend
this phone to the RIM BlackBerry addict who is tired of the decaying BlackBerry
brand and wants to get another smartphone platform that pumps out regular
upgrades for hardware and software. This Droid 4 performs better than any
BlackBerry and, I would argue, now has a QWERTY keyboard to match the BlackBerry.
Again, though,
if you're of the mind that thin is in and you require only a touch-screen to
operate your phone, pick something else. There are plenty of choices in the
smartphone sea.








