Motorola is set to sell its millionth Google-powered Droid device by the end
of this year, exceeding analyst expectations, and quickly developing a large
fan base. But can Motorola replicate the success of the late RAZR and create
an iconic Google Android phone to threaten Apple's iPhone?

Ailing<http://www.pcworld.com/businesscenter/article/158797/motorola_reports_36b_loss_as_phone_sales_fall_by_half.html>Motorola
may just be on the road to recovery. The
Droid <http://www.pcworld.com/reviews/product/324707/review/droid.html>,
sold in conduction with Verizon in a $100 million marketing push, is on
track to sell one million units in the U.S. by the end of this year,
according to an analyst quoted by
GigaOm<http://gigaom.com/2009/11/30/droid-q4-sales/>.
The European outlook, where the Droid is known as the Milestone, is not as
cheery -- as Dext (U.S.
Cliq<http://www.pcworld.com/reviews/product/319850/review/cliq.html>)
and Milestone haven't benefited from such a strong marketing push.

But one can say the Motorola Droid is doing particularly well though.
Admittedly, the Droid hasn't sold one million devices in its first weekend,
like the Apple iPhone 3GS
did<http://www.pcworld.com/article/167096/apple_sells_more_than_a_million_iphone_3gs_models.html>,
but to reach this number in just over a month is clearly a good sign. In
comparison, Palm's much-hyped Pre is
reported<http://pulse2.com/2009/06/30/about-300000-palm-pre-devices-sold/>to
have sold around 300,000 devices in its first month.

*Early Reviews vs. Late Reviews*

Reviewers received the Droid positively when it first launched. The large
high-resolution screen impressed my fellow PC
World<http://www.pcworld.com/reviews/product/324707/review/droid.html>colleague
Robert S. Anthony, while New
York 
Times<http://www.nytimes.com/2009/11/05/technology/personaltech/05pogue.html>'
David Pogue and Wall Street
Journal's<http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704013004574515644074742728.html>Walt
Mossberg were happy to recommend the phone among others.

But several reviewers also noted a few weak points of the Droid. It was
noted that the keyboard was too shallow and not very well thought and the
phone can get slow at times. Problems with a flimsy battery
cover<http://droidie.com/2009/11/20/the-droid-battery-cover-problem/>cropped
up later, which kept on falling off the device. Until Motorola comes
up with a solution, users
say<http://droidie.com/2009/11/17/traveling-with-droidie/#comment-248>they
resorted to taping the battery cover on the Droid -- not the most
cosmetically of affairs.

*"Zealotry Sucks, and so Does the Droid"*

The controversial sub-head above comes from Dave Winer, who started the
Droidie<http://droidie.com/2009/11/30/zealotry-sucks-and-so-does-the-droid/>blog
a day after he bought the Motorola Droid. Roughly a month after, his
thoughts on the Droid are clear: "Because while it is a piece of s**t phone,
at least it's good for developers, and Verizon knows what it's doing with
its phone network. It sucks less than the iPhone. But it still sucks."

So is the initial excitement on the Droid wearing off? One wouldn't start a
blog looking into the day-by-day use of a new phone only to slag it off a
month later if the phone was indeed performing. To balance his view, David
K.<http://droidie.com/2009/11/30/zealotry-sucks-and-so-does-the-droid/#comment-489>comments
on the same post: "There is a difference between not-perfect and
shitty," when referring to the iPhone and the Motorola Droid.

*Is Google's Own Phone a Threat?*

While the Motorola Droid is the top of crop of Android devices at the
moment, rumors of a flagship Google-branded Android
device<http://www.pcworld.com/article/183391/google_phone_another_day_another_sighting.html>are
looming.
Gizmodo <http://gizmodo.com/5415169/leak-the-google-phone-is-a-certainty> is
quoting trusted sources saying that the Google phone "is a certainty",
despite previous
denials<http://www.electronista.com/articles/09/10/31/google.insists.android.3rd.party.only/>from
the search giant.

One can't assert the truthfulness of Google's statements, but in hindsight,
Apple publicly denied making the iPhone, despite working on it in secrecy
for almost two years before launch. This *could* be the same case for Google
as well.

But Google isn't a hardware company like Apple. If Google was to develop its
own phone, it would be manufactured by someone else (like
HTC<http://www.pcworld.com/article/174335/htc_you_ought_to_know_who_we_are.html>,
which already has several Android devices -- G1, Hero) but under the Google
brand. If Google indeed presents an own-brand flagship Android phone, it
will be interesting to see how the other manufacturers using the platform
will react.


http://www.pcworld.com/article/183426/2010_the_year_of_the_droid.html

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