To my readers, I apologize for the radio silence, but I have a valid excuse! I present to you, my official review of the Droid X from Verizon Wireless. I purchased my Droid X in store on launch date of July 15th, 2010. After un-boxing, I spent many hours fixated to the wonders of this powerful Smartphone. Of course, I have done my fair share of moseying the Android Marketplace. I have played multiple games, downloaded a significant amount of apps—whether they be helpful or useless—but that is to be told in another blog. For now, I will describe what you should expect from your Droid X.
After activation at the Verizon Wireless store, I quickly returned to my abode and began to personalize my new Smartphone. First things first, I had to integrate my Gmail account. Upon doing so, all my contacts I synced earlier (from my Blackberry Curve 8330 with Google Sync) easily transferred over. I also synced my contacts with my Facebook account, thus receiving pictures for my contacts. I did find some duplicates between my original contacts and Facebook friends, but thankfully Android allows easy contact linking between contacts.
After I set everything up, I quickly became accustomed to the four physical keys on the front of the phone. These include:
The Menu Key: Functional at almost any screen or application. If you are stuck, don’t know what, or don’t know what you can do, just hit this button and your options are listed quickly before your eyes.
The Home Key: Simple. It quickly takes you back to the Android Dashboard. There are seven home screens users can customize with widgets galore, but the Home button takes you straight to the middle one, usually where the time and date is displayed.
The Back Key: Going from a Blackberry Curve to the Droid X, this button brings back memories. Literally, it goes back one page when pressed. One thing I love about this key is when I’m in one app, and I get a notification for something else, once I finished with the latter, I just continuously press the back key until I arrive at my first app.
The Search Key: With its magnifying glass image, it does what the title says—searches. Convenient if you are doing something and someone asks a simple question. You can press this key, type what you need in the search bar, and it will not only search the web, but also the contents of your phone.
One may notice on the home screen, a bar pop up with dots and an image of a home in the middle. This is for quick access to another screen. For example, I may be on my media screen, launching some tunes. Instead of flipping through six pages just to get to my games, I change one screen so the bar pops up, and press my destination screen’s icon.
When you get your Droid X, don’t be alarmed by the tiny box. Included of course is the Smartphone, a USB cable, an adapter for your USB cable to become a wall charger, and the manual.
That’s all I have for now. Stay tuned for my next blog about useful apps. Once again, thanks for reading my marbles.




