For almost two and a half years, my G1 was my favorite toy. It came with some serious history: the G1 was the first-ever Android phone, when the thought of Google's first OS was so novel that it earned the nickname "the Google phone". But as the years wore on, my phone grew increasingly geriatric. I'm pretty sure it actually spied on me, because the more intent I became on replacing it, the clunkier it got. About a month ago, I broke down and bought what has quickly become my new favorite toy, the HTC Sensation. I'm convinced this phone runs on equal parts Taiwanese engineering brilliance and magic. This phone:
Runs the Urbanspoon app. I've actually been waiting for almost three years for a phone that does this. I'm notoriously bad at picking restaurants, so Urbanspoon might have been the first thing I installed when I got the phone working.
Allows me to beat you at Words With Friends. When the Android market told me that devices running Android 1.6 could run Words With Friends, it was lying. I think what it was trying to say was "grab your chisel and a handful of pebbles and make your own lettery tiles." Wordfeud is a much better pseudo-Scrabble; its interface is cleaner and less gimmicky, it incorporates native Android features better, and it won't steal your soul because it's not made by Zynga. But in Wordfeud, I can only beat you if you're running Android too. Words With Friends is indiscriminate! (Yep, this is a challenge: I'm Pavalavavalavich on there if you're up for it.)
Can stream all of my music from anywhere in the world. This is mind-blowing. Via Google Music, I can upload all of the music that I own to Google's big hard drive in the sky, then listen to it, on demand, whenever and wherever I want to. This has completely obsoleted my iPod. (If anyone wants one--and you do--I have three invites left.)
Streams all my podcasts too. Podcasts are just RSS feeds anyway, so all it's taken to make phone-USB syncing a thing of the past is an RSS reader with an audio playback codec written into it.
Automatically adjusts its screen brightness. Such an obvious, but entirely novel, functionality. If it's bright outside, the screen gets brighter so you can actually read it. If it's dark, the screen dims to save battery. Phones have had front-facing cameras since before the Motorola Razr was cool, so why not put them to use?
Connects to Wi-Fi without destroying its battery. 4G is really, really solid--but it's incredibly satisfying to download an application update in a matter of seconds.
It's true that I lost a little hipster cred in upgrading from the vintage, truly open-source option to the new and shiny one. It was worth it.
Currently listening: "20 Years," the Civil Wars
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