the keyboard looks really good. can you believe i only realised a few months ago that the G1 keyboard has two '@' buttons. i always pressed the alt + 2 combination for a whole year lol.
i hope the G2 has that feature as i find it helps save time. if only it were a 5-row keyboard also, because i quite like the idea of having keys unique to just number functions.
The shift arrow buttons seem to waste a bit of space, there could be something else there.
I thought the same before about 5-row keyboards, but I actually checked out a 4-row keyboard on a WinMo HTC device and it didn't really make any difference so I'm cool with it.
Also, because the G2 keyboard stretches across the whole width of the device unlike the G1, the keys are bigger, which is nice.
i prefer the G1 keyboard (from what i can see and compare to the G2 with), but the G2 should be a better quality one. my G1 spacebar is kinda jammed, and so are the shift and alt buttons. it is sooo frustrating, especially when ive taken so much care of it. i dont know how general wear and tear could be so bad. i do 90% of the time use the keyboard though.
That's strange. I've had my G1 a lot longer than you have and there's no wear and tear at all, except for on the paint where it has chipped in a few places and the little cover thing that covered up the USB port which fell off a while back. There's nothing wrong with my keyboard at all.
TechRadar says the G2 has a Qualcomm Snapdragon MSM7230 CPU:
T-Mobile G2: US gets HTC Desire Z early? | News | TechRadar UK
the only thing with me getting this phone is that i HAVE to upgrade with t-mobile. i cannot move to O2 and get £125 off the contract, which i why i was open to moving to O2 and get the Galaxy S.
I shall see the pricing and see whether i want to keep my G1 for a bit longer and also what deals t-mobile offer me - hopefully something really good.
they said that the G1 was one of the devices that were
more difficult to brick, i hope its the same case with the G2.
TechRadar is wrong, it's a Scorpion chip, not a Snapdragon.
http://www.androidguys.com/2010/09/02/tmobile-scoop-confirms-g2-800-mhz-scorpion-processor/
As explained, the Scorpion architecture is far superior to the Snapdragon. The main difference is that the Snapdragon uses integrated graphics whereas the Scorpion has a dedicated Adreno 205 GPU.
Look at the OpenGL scores:
HTC Vision is the G2, and this test was on a pre-production model.
As you can see, outperforming the Galaxy S (Captivate).
Make no mistake - this is a high-end device.
No front-facing camera is a minor annoyance.
Frankly - nobody I know with iPhone 4's, HTC Evo's or Galaxy S's is even using it.
Hell, my wife's Nokia N95 had a front-facing camera three years ago and she never used it, not even once.
I don't like this whole attitude of "Oh, Apple's doing it so it must be worth doing". It's a "Keeping up with the Joneses" attitude when frankly we all know Android and the high-end hardware running Android is superior, regardless of a front-facing camera.