A Week with the Motorola Droid Bionic
The Bionic is sleek, fast and fun to use -- but its short battery life could limit its appeal.
Mon, September 19, 2011
Computerworld — The Droid Bionic, the latest top-of-the-line Android phone from Motorola Mobility and Verizon Wireless ($300 with a two-year plan), is more of everything. The paradox -- which I discovered after working with the phone for a week -- is that all that more winds up being somewhat less.
It's impossible, as usual, to complain about the quality of Motorola's hardware. The Bionic, at 2.6 x 5.0 x 0.4 in. and 5.6 oz., is about the same size and weight as the Droid X and X2, and slimmer than most other LTE phones.
I found the 4.3-in. display to be bright enough for outdoors, although you wouldn't brag about the quality of a movie in full daylight.
The four Android function buttons along the bottom are targets on the glass, not actual buttons. Volume keys are on the right edge, power and headphone on the top, USB and HDMI ports on the left.
There are cameras on the back and front -- the one on the back is an impressive 8 megapixels; it can take 1080p movies. The front-facing camera is a standard 480 x 640 VGA.
All good, all befitting a smartphone that boasts a high-end Android build: version 2.3.4, Gingerbread.
What's fresh about the Bionic is that it's running a 1 GHz dual-core processor and connects to Verizon's 4G LTE network. As with all other LTE phones, the Bionic's connectivity rocks, and it now has a processor that can keep up.
The Bionic can also act as a mobile hotspot for up to five devices. And like its cousin, AT&T's Motorola Atrix 4G, the Bionic can hook up to a variety of accessories, including a "lapdock" that turns it into a netbook. (Pricing for the Bionic's lapdock was not available when I wrote this.)
Motorola Mobility has also made some interesting tweaks to the vanilla Android UI, raising the specter that some of them might find their way into later revisions from Motorola's new corporate master, Google. The main Home screen now has four user-configurable speed-dial targets; texting and camera apps now appear on the bottom of every Home screen. Motorola appears to be rolling out that interface to other phones through updates.
Perhaps more consequentially, you can now organize your installed apps by groups; you can show a menu of just your games, just your core apps, just your social apps, whatever. It's quite convenient, and better than its iOS counterpart functionality.
As far as basic functionality goes, calls sounded good and camera quality was generally OK, though like any other phone camera, no one would mistake it for a digital SLR.


