And that's a good thing.
The
modifications Samsung and HTC apply to Google's Android software are
meant to be improvements. But I've complained before about how the
changes actually make phones more complex to use. The S4 even has an
easy mode for first-time smartphone users, an admission that the normal
mode is too confounding.
Google worked with
both Samsung Electronics and HTC to come out with "Google Play" editions
of the hit phones. Instead of customized softwareSamsung and HTC, the
Google phones run a pure version of Android, just as it was developed by
Google.
Google lets any phone maker use its
Android operating system for free. To set themselves apartcompetitors,
phone makers often add their own touches to devices. They rearrange the
menu or load additional apps. Wireless carriers alsoto add their own
apps. Before you know it, phones are bloated with features and apps you
don't want and can't get rid of.
Consider my
experience with the original S4 over the weekend. As I tried to adjust
the camera's flash setting, I inadvertently made some postage stamp icon
pop up. That activated the camera's dual-shot mode, which snaps a shot
of you with the front camera to superimpose over whatever you're
shooting with the camera on the back of the phone. I didn't want that,
but I couldn't figure out how to get rid of it. My friend couldn't
either. So we bagged the shot. Taking photos with a phone is supposed to
be fun, not a chore.
With Google's version of
the S4, I get a no-frills camera that is easy to figure out. It lacks
gimmicks such as dual shots and the ability to combine several images of
motion into a single shot. It offers about a half-dozen shooting modes,
such as night, action and panorama, rather than the dozen or so on the
original S4. But a half-dozen is about a half-dozen more than I need and
use.
Google's S4 also lacks the original
model's ability to pause video automatically when you look awaythe
screen or to scroll down an article when you tilt your head. Those
features may sound cool, but they often don't work properly.
The
Google version of the S4 also has alarm sounds that I can actually wake
up to. Samsung had substituted those sounds with soft, soothing
melodies that I end up incorporating into dreams. I've overslept a few
times as a result.
As for Google's version of
the HTC One, you don't get a busy home screen filled with news articles
and Facebook status updates your phone thinks you want to read. Instead,
you get a clean page with few apps. It's up to you to add the ones you
want to see and use.
Both Google phones feel
spare and minimal, which is great because it makes me feel in control.
If I want to constantly know the weather, it's easy to add a weather
widget to the home screen of either phone. But it's not forced.
The
same goes for apps. I get basic functions such as text messaging and
the clock and a range of Google services such as Gmail and YouTube. If I
want other apps, I can easily tap the Google Play icon to get them.
With the original S4, Samsung tries to steer you into its own app store,
as well as its own music and video players. You end up with too many
ways to do the same things.
You might think it
takes a lot of work to add the apps you want to Google's phones, but it
actually takes more work to hide or turn off everything you don't need -
that is, if you can at all- with Samsung's and HTC's versions.
Now
for the bad news: The Google edition of the S4 sells for $649, while
Google's HTC One goes for $599. You can typically get the original
models for $100 to $200 through your wireless carrier with a two-year
agreement. And unless you're on T-Mobile, your monthly bill won't go
down just because you pay full price for the phone elsewhere.
In
addition, both Google phones are compatible only with T-Mobile,
AT&T and other carriers that use GSM cellular technology, not the
CDMA networks used by Sprint and Verizon Wireless. The Google edition
would have been great for Verizon customers who still have unlimited
data plans. Verizon no longer lets you stay on that plan if you buy a
subsidized phone, so you'd have to pay the full price anyway.
The
Google phones are also ideal for people who want the latest Android
system that Google has to offer. You'll be able to update your phone as
Google releases new versions of Android. Normally, phone makers and
wireless carriers updates by weeks or months, so you can only read about
those new Android features.
There are a few useful Samsung and HTC add-ons that Google does bring to its versions of the phones.
Google's
S4 is compatible with Samsung's S-View flip cover. Using a magnetic
sensor, the phone detects when the cover is closed and switches to a
special mode that gives you the current time and details about who's
calling through a small window in the cover. You can answer or reject a
call without flipping over the cover.
Google's
HTC One, meanwhile, shares the original model's front-facing speakers,
giving you great sound when you're watching a movie or listening to
music. Both models also have cameras with larger sensor pixels for
better low-light shots. Our tests show that the HTC One produces
low-light images with less distortion than other Android phones, though
images aren't particularly crisp because the resolution is lower.
There are a few things I wish Google would have brought to its phones and to Android in general.
In
the original S4, the on-screen keyboard has a row of numerals to type
in. With the Google S4, you have to hit a button to get another screen
with numerals, then toggle back for the letters. The original S4 also
has the ability to run two apps side by side in a split window. That's
gone in Google's S4.
Meanwhile, the original
HTC One has the ability to make calls, send texts and take photos by
sliding iconsthe lock screen. With the Google version, you have to
unlock the screen before getting icons to those functions.
On
both phones, Google also adds one feature I could do without: a
360-degree panorama known as Photo Sphere. Neat as it is, it
detractswhat is otherwise a just-the-basics camera. It would have been
better as a separate app for those who want it.
But
that's no reason to shun the Google phones. The minimized feel of
Google's versions underscores how busy software can detractgood
hardware. Take away that clutter, and you have excellent phones.
It's
a bummer that you can't get the simplified phones through regular
channels. You can get them only through Google's online Play store - for
hundreds of dollars more.
About the Google phones
The
new phones are existing Samsung and HTC phones loaded with Google's
version of the Android operating system. That's the version that Google
makes, before phone makers and phone carriers load Android up with their
own features and apps.
These phones are good
options for those who don'tall the bells and whistles in the original
models. They are cleaner and easier to use. But they are also more
expensive, as you have to pay full price through Google's online Play
store rather than a subsidized price that wireless carriers offer with
two-year agreements.
These phones aren't
compatible with Verizon's or Sprint's CDMA networks. If you're on
AT&T, you'll be paying more for the phone without any reduction in
monthly phone bills. If you're on T-Mobile, though, expect to save $20 a
month, or $480 over two years. You're still paying about $70 more
overall for Google's S4 and $20 more for Google's One, but it's not the
hundreds of dollars you'd be paying on AT&T.
The
one-time, upfront cost is $649 for Google's S4 with 16 gigabytes of
storage and $599 for the One with 32 gigabytes. Both phones are
available in the US only through Google's online Play store, with
shipments expected by July 9.

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