Manufacturer HTC Carrier T-Mobile Available October 22, 2008 (US) Screen 3.2 in (81 mm) HVGA (480×320) 65K color capacitive touchscreen Camera 3.2 megapixel with auto focus Operating system Android 1.0 Input Capacitive touchscreen, sliding QWERTY Keyboard, Trackball CPU Qualcomm MSM7201A ARM6 @ 528MHz Memory 192 MB DDR SDRAM 256 MB Flash Memory card microSD Networks GSM/GPRS/EDGE (850/900/1800/1900), UMTS (1700/2100), HSDPA/HSUPA (7.2/2 Mbps) Connectivity Bluetooth 2.0, 802.11 b/g Battery 1150 mAh Physical size 117.7 mm x 55.7 mm x 17.1 mm (4.60 in x 2.16 in x 0.62 in) Weight 158g w/ battery
T-Mobile G1 Photos:
T-Mobile G1 Videos:
Top 5 T-Mobile G1 Reviews:
T-Mobile G1 Android Phone Hands-On - Gizmodo: We just got an early hands on with T-Mobile#039;s G1 Android and yes, it does look as nice as it does in the photos. The screen is fantastic, and it#039;s actually not as chunky as it looks, but it#039;s definitely not iPhone-skinny. You can see the Sizemodo here, and we#039;ll have even more details and a more in-depth hands-on in a bit. UPDATE: Updating hands-on impressions live, right now.
T-Mobile G1 (Google Android Phone) - PC Magazine: Sure, it looks like an iPhone in a Sidekick body. But slightly awkward design aside, the T-Mobile G1 quot;Google Phonequot; establishes Android as a slick new entrant in the smartphone space. It promises to be a fun, powerful Web-centric handheld when it launches on Oct. 22.
Hands on: T-Mobile G1 Android review - Tech Radar UK: The world#039;s first Android-powered handset has finally hit the market under the guise of the T-Mobile G1 with Google, and it certainly doesn#039;t disappoint in its #039;Google-y-ness#039;.
T-Mobile G1 review - PC Advisor: T-Mobile, Google and High Tech Computer (HTC) unveiled the highly anticipated first Google Android phone in New York on Tuesday. PC Advisor got a chance to try out the HTC Dream, sold as the T-Mobile G1, at HTC#039;s office in Taipei. Here#039;s our review.
T-Mobile G1 impressions: what we love, what we don't - Engadget: T-Mobile, HTC and Google stood hand in hand yesterday to debut the first Android phone, the T-Mobile G1. It felt a bit like a new era for the mobile industry -- though the rollerblading seemed a tad out of place -- with high-profile companies backing a Linux-based, touch-driven mobile OS, and spouting the word quot;openquot; every two sentences. But, naturally, high aims alone don#039;t build a killer phone; there are a lot details to get right, and a lot more that Google and company have seen fit to leave in the hands of developers. Let#039;s take a look at what#039;s working so far, and what might need some more time in the oven:
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