There are concerns that the ‘antennagate’ issue which dogged the arrival of the Apple iPhone 4 could be also be affecting some Motorola Droid 2 smartphones, newly arrived on the Verizon Wireless network.
Mobile Crunch, citing “those we know who have had ’em for a day or two and who pay a nearly obsessive amount of detail to stuff like this,” reports that early Droid 2 units are experiencing problems with connectivity.
“We’re hearing a good number of reports within our geeky circle that Motorola’s brand new baby, the Verizon Droid 2, might not be so good with that whole maintaining-a-solid-signal thing,” the tech site reported 13 August.
The Droid 2 arrived 12 August on the Verizon network and features a 3.7-inch touch screen, a QWERTY keypad, a 1GHz processor and the Android 2.2 operating system. A same-day teardown of the device by repair company iFixit found the Droid 2 to be an improvement on its successful predecessor, though smartly only in areas where improvements were welcome.
Added to the findings of Mobile Crunch’s geeky friends, the site says that one of the two early units it received also has a signal that’s “all over the board, dipping from full signal down to nearly none whist sitting in the same spot (and no, we’re not holding it wrong).” It offered additional evidence by pointing to Engadget’s review of the Droid 2.
“Signal strength was a major issue for all four Engadget editors who’ve been able to spend time with four different Droid 2s in different parts of the country this week,” Engadget reported 13 August. “We’re used to seeing 3G drop to EDGE, GPRS, or disappear completely on our iPhones on AT&T, but it’s a rarity on Verizon – so to see our Droid 2’s data indicator flip-flop from EV-DO to 1xRTT and then disappear entirely was really alarming.”
If the Droid 2 is in fact experiencing connectivity problems, it could have major consequences for both Motorola and Verizon – which right now heavily depends on Android-based devices to compete against its iPhone-offering rival, AT&T.
Additionally, an antenna issue could be, at the very least, a bit embarrassing for Verizon.
Following the debacle AT&T and Apple faced over antenna issues with the iPhone 4 – a issue large enough to have necessitated a special Apple press conference, during which Apple CEO Steve Jobs jokingly referred to the media-overblown story as “Antennagate,” as well as a letter to Jobs from New York State Senator Chuck Schumer, asking that Jobs and Apple do right by consumers – Verizon publicly chided its competitor.
In an advertisement for the Motorola Droid X, Verizon added in a bit of text at the bottom – in clearly a jab at AT&T and Apple – “It comes with a double antenna design. The kind that allows you to hold the phone any way you like and use it just about anywhere to make crystal clear calls.”
AT&T and Apple may soon be more than happy to point out to Verizon that the Droid 2 is having issues placing crystal clear calls – no matter how users hold it.
Motorola did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
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