Motorola Droid Madness
The Motorola Droid, officially revealed Wednesday after a buzz-building marketing campaign, is making plenty of waves for its sleek design — its 3.7-inch, 854-by-480 pixel display dwarfs the iPhone’s 3.5-inch, 480-by-320 pixel offering — as well as for its standout features such as built-in turn-by-turn navigation and full multitasking support. And, thanks to its new Android 2.0 operating system, the phone packs a host of other options the rest of the upcoming Android phones won’t see for some time.
(For a full look at some of the Droid’s most noteworthy assets, see “Verizon Droid: 5 Standout Features.”)
Already, analysts are calling for the Droid to reverse Verizon’s sliding profits and help Motorola rebound from some less-than-stellar years. And, of course, the inevitable iPhone comparisons are cropping up left and right.
Sorry to disappoint, but we won’t be using the phrase “iPhone-killer” here today, other than to suggest that anyone who calls anything a “something-killer” should be bludgeoned with a giant Styrofoam mallet. (The same applies to anyone who commits one of these cell phone sins, be it on an iPhone, a Droid, or a two-pound DynaTAC 8000X.)
Droids For Sale
The Droid, you see, actually costs $299.99 (with a two-year contract). You then have to send away a mail-in rebate to get $100 back and reach the frequently quoted $199.99 price tag. As of Thursday, however, you can reserve one at any Best Buy store and pay only the $199.99; the store will instantly apply the $100 rebate at checkout. When the phone comes out on November 6, you’ll walk in, pick up your Droid, and walk out.
Cost, incidentally, is one Droid-iPhone comparison worth making. BillShrink created a side-by-side chart pitting the Motorola Droid up against the iPhone 3GS. The devices themselves run the same price, but what about those hefty voice and data fees after 24 months of contractually signed service? Turns out they’re the same, too.
Unlimited voice/data plans for both the iPhone 3GS and the Motorola Droid amount to $3799 over two years, BillShrink discovered. When it comes to an “average plan” — calculated by BillShrink as being 900 minutes with 5 GB of data and unlimited messaging — the iPhone and the Droid both come out to the same $2839 over their initial 24-month periods.
iDon’t know about you, but I’m guessing that’s no coincidence.
JR Raphael writes geek humor at eSarcasm, where satire never goes out of style. You can keep up with him on Twitter: @jr_raphael.