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Dr Ron dreams the HTC Dream
3 Comments · Posted by Dr Ron in Blogging, HTC, Internet, Personal, Social Networking, TTR, Technical
HTC is no stranger to the PDA market space. The Taiwanese manufacturing juggernaut has been producing Personal Digital Assistants for Europe, America, Asia and Australasia for some years. The popular iMate products, and the more recent Touch and Touch Diamond models have had a big impact on the local PDA market, with each version seemingly smaller, faster, lighter, more powerful and more feature-rich.
Enter the HTC Dream, now released in Australia: the first phone to run on Google’s Android operating system.
What’s a Google Android? Google Android is an operating system for mobile telephones and PDAs. But not just any operating system. This is the long-awaited open source solution from Google, which means developers have free and unfettered access to the nuts and bolts of the hardware it runs on. Anyone from enthusiast to professional can write their own application to run on the Dream, and publish this application for download on HTC’s Android Market. In other words, this is HTC’s version of the Apple Store.
Availability.
I bought the HTC Dream (known internationally as the T-Mobile G1) from a gadget store in Melbourne. It wasn’t purchased on a mobile phone plan and it wasn’t badged as anything. It’s “network unlocked” which means you can run the Dream with any SIM card on any network, i.e. it’s not locked to a particular carrier. Consequently you may need to program the Dream with your carrier’s particular message centre settings. Here are the settings that I got working for Hutchison 3. Optus, and possibly reseller TeleChoice, are currently the only carriers offering the HTC Dream on mobile contracts in Australia. I would hope that these are being sold with all the Optus settings pre-programmed.
Functionality: The Good…

Out of the box, presentation is excellent. The Dream powers-up and the clarity of the 3″ capacitive touchscreen is very good indeed. You can navigate around the Dream a number of different ways: by gently touching and dragging your finger across the screen; by using the mini track-ball to negotiate buttons, webpages and call logs; or a combination of these methods. The “touch and flick” navigation system is easy to use and surprisingly accurate. Some people have asked me if you can use the “Apple pinch” to resize photos and windows. The answer is no, although this is more a limitation with Android than the HTC itself. I’m sure we’ll see “pinching” and a heap of other things in versions to come.
Feature-packed. The Dream is an HSDPA 3G handset with Bluetooth, WiFi, a sliding QWERTY keyboard and a 3.2 megapixel camera with auto-focus. It’s a telephone, a web browser, a portable email client, a music player, an Instant Messaging client… the list goes on.
Gmail and Calendar integration. Automatic synchronisation with Gmail, Google Calendar and Google Contacts works very well. Update something on your Mac or PC and the change will be reflected on your HTC Dream in a few moments. Listeners to Tech Talk Radio will know that I recently re-jigged my personal email to use Google’s Gmail. I’ve set-up Gmail to POP in to my usual email server, retrieve my messages, then using IMAP I can access my messages on Gmail from the HTC Dream, as well as other clients like Thunderbird running on Ubuntu or Outlook running on Windows. This takes a little bit of getting used to but seems to be working very well.
Combined with Google’s free SMS alert to Australian subscribers, the automated appointment notification is an invaluable tool, and all but kills 3rd-party UM and notification applications that big corporates have traditionally paid big bucks for.
Android Market. This is Google’s answer to the Apple Store. The Android Market is awesome and contains a heap of free applications which can be easily downloaded and installed on the HTC Dream. My favourite Android Market application is Shazam (Sony Ericsson calls this “TrackID”), which detects and tags music you’re listening to. The Android Market home page has more information for downloading to Android-powered devices, and links to resources for developers.
Contacts. The contacts / address book is smooth and easy to use. There is a setting in each contact called “send straight to voicemail”… why hasn’t anyone thought of this before?! Awesome! The usual thumbnail-contact-picture feature is there and works well, along with fields for heaps of contact numbers and personal details. As you’ve probably come to expect, changes in your address book are automatically replicated to Google Contacts online. Updates happen fast. Very cool.

Music Player. The music player is functional and indexes music tracks based on track name, artist, album name or playlist. Album art is displayed as a thumbnail in search results, or as a large image during playback. The great thing is that you don’t need proprietary software to load music onto the HTC Dream! Simply plug the device into your PC or Mac via a USB cable, and the HTC Dream appears as an external device which you can copy music to and from. My excitement about this simple feature is stupid, because it’s such an obvious thing to be able to do, but sad because modern so-called “music player phones”, manufactured by big names like Sony, still require you to run their own special software to simply transfer music and data files.
The supplied ear-bud headphones are okay as far as ear-bud headphones go. They plug into the HTC Dream’s USB port and have a control button for answering calls, pausing music playback and so on, as well as a volume dial which works independently of the HTC volume controls.
QWERTY keyboard. The 5-row QWERTY keyboard is revealed by sliding the screen to one side. The keyboard works well and I think I’m used to it now, after a few weeks. It’s small, and my personal experience is that two thumbs are faster than two index fingers. It’s illuminated and has good tactile feedback when you press a key. Don’t try to use it while you’re driving though, you need two hands, and anyway you shouldn’t be using a PDA while you’re driving should you?

Messaging in portrait mode, or landscape mode with the QWERTY keyboard.
…The Bad…
While I really, really like the Dream, and clearly have a vested interest in my new best friend, there are things which HTC can do better. Here are some things which strike me as needing improvement. You may or may not agree.
Battery life. Sometimes I get a day from the supplied 1150 mAh battery, sometimes not. If you don’t have access to a charger while you’re out on the road, this can be a nightmare. HTC needs to address battery life urgently in the next version.
FM radio. There is none. There are Android Market applications for streaming audio while you’re on the go, like Last.fm. This is personal preference I guess but many people will be looking for a radio while they’re out and about driving; in the gym; walking the dog; wherever.
The camera. Comparatively low-res, 3.2 megapixels. Video is not supported. MMS is okay for still pictures, but not video. No flash. Also the shutter button has two positions: half depressed for auto-focus and fully depressed to take the picture. Pressing the shutter button does not automatically launch the camera application, you need to find this through the applications menu. Lag between pressing the button and taking the photo is quite distracting. Images are generally good but don’t throw away your Pentax SLR just yet.
Microsoft integration. There’s no native syncing to Microsoft Outlook mail, contacts or calendar. This is important to many people and probably needs to be addressed, although Google’s solution would be to use GMail which is tightly integrated with the HTC Dream.
File browsing. If you own a Nokia or Sony Ericsson phone, you will be familiar with a file explorer-type application, which lets you browse different file types and storage locations in the device. On the HTC Dream there is no native file browser. The Dream runs on a Debian variant of the Linux operating system. To access data, such as photos, music and voice recordings, you need to launch the application that created the data. For example, photos can only be accessed from within the “photo” application. The file system is locked fairly tightly to prevent people doing stupid things, like deleting system files. You get used to this fairly quickly, so it’s probably just a different way of doing things, not necessarily a bad way.
No native “notepad” application. If you want to scribble a note, reminder, password or anything else, there’s no native notepad-style application. Again, you will need to download an application from the Android Market that does the job.
…and The Ugly.
Mini-USB. The mini-USB port for the Dream’s computer interface and battery charging is good… but not for audio. The Dream needs a 3.5mm audio socket urgently for people hoping to replace their iPod.
Memory expansion. The microSD card is tricky to get to, requiring removal of the back cover.
Google Latitude still doesn’t work with Google Maps. This is ugly, ugly, ugly, and very disappointing. If users of Nokia and Samsung phones running proprietary operating systems have access to Latitude, why doesn’t the first phone to be running Google Android? This is more a criticism of Google, not HTC and it’s smartphone, but this noticeable oversight reflects poorly on the Google/HTC partnership.

Google Maps is sharp and accurate, but doesn't support Latitude
(Google Latitude is a new service which combines the power of Google Maps with ‘always on’ wireless and 3G phone networks. Using Google Latitude, mobile devices can be configured to send regular location updates, and your position is plotted on Google Maps and can be shared with friends.)
Bill shock. The “always on” nature of the HTC Dream, and its regular data replication to Google, can chew-up valuable bandwidth. This is fine if you have a 3GB data plan included with your mobile phone contract, but don’t try to use the HTC Dream on one of those old “$5 for 10MB” plans. Also, be aware of your carrier’s data charges when you’re roaming on a partner network or if you’re using the device overseas. Thankfully the HTC Dream has a “use data on home network only” setting which will be very helpful to many people.
Summing up?
In addition to addressing “the bad” and “the ugly”, it would also be nice to be able to add desktop shortcuts to frequently-dialled contacts, or access frequently-used system features like the wireless manager. Currently the desktop is functional, but limited to only accessing installed programs.
There are heaps of other features I’ve glossed over or haven’t mentioned. The HTC Dream is a robust, exciting new device from HTC and an excellent effort for “version 1″ of Google’s long-awaited mobile operating system.
Importantly, the HTC Dream is a serious contender to Apple’s iPhone, and Windows Mobile, Symbian and other proprietary smart-phone operating systems. The HTC Dream is a fast, stable and intuitive platform and it’s my new best friend. I can’t wait to see Android and HTC smartphones in one year from now.

Author comment by neerav · March 31, 2009 at 1:01 PM
Hi, could you please tell me the name of the gadget store in Melbourne that you bought your HTC Dream from?
Also the price they charged and whether its a gray import from the USA with no warranty or a HTC Australia phone with warranty?
thx
Admin comment by Dr Ron · April 1, 2009 at 11:56 AM
Hi neerav, I purchased the HTC Dream from Organiser World in LaTrobe Street iin Melbourne:
http://www.ow.com.au/
I would give them a call first if you’re keen, to make sure they have stock.
Under $1,000 to buy outright, no it is not a grey import and has the usual RTM 12-month warranty. I actually paid a bit extra for a 3-year extended warranty.
Hope this helps! Let me know how you go.
The Surgery » Blog Archive » Android Cupcake – a welcome improvement to the HTC Dream · August 5, 2009 at 11:42 PM
[...] my “HTC Dream – first impressions” post in March this year, I listed several things which irked [...]