LG Optimus One: Many Months Later Review

I’ve covered why I chose the LG Optimus One and with that I’ve experienced first hand the biggest problem with Android. After a few months of usage as both a 3G data device and now as a phone I would like to give share a some what in-depth review / thoughts on the LG Optimus One.

Specifications
The specifications are not mind-blowing and I didn’t expect it to be stellar, but I have to say that it exceeded my expectations: mainly due to a processor with sufficient power and the ample amount of RAM. You can check your devices specifications using Android System Info

  • 3.2″ HVGA screen (480×320)
  • 600 MHz CPU with Adreno 200 GPU (same GPU as the Nexus One)
  • 418MB RAM
  • Android 2.2 (Froyo) (supposed to be upgradable to Gingerbread this month, May 2011)
  • 172MB of available phone storage
  • 3 megapixel rear camera (no front camera)
  • Micro SD card underneath the rear cover (can be hot-swappable)
  • 3.7V, 1500mAh 5.6Wh battery

Some notable things absent from the Optimus One

  • No camera flash
  • No front-facing camera
  • No auto brightness sensor

Hardware
The screen is small at 3.2″ but it has a good HVGA resolution of 480×320 which allows good compatibility with applications and offers a better experience when surfing as it shows more content. The downside with a high resolution screen and small physical size, is that some text can appear small (e.g. name of application under their icon). It is a capacitive screen with the ability to detect a maximum of 2 points and does indeed have multi-touch (pinch-to-zoom works in applications that support it).

The screen is pretty responsive and the OS is smooth most of the times. I believe this is thanks to the combination of a capable enough CPU, optimizations in Android 2.2 as well as the ample amount of RAM. The biggest problem with this small screen is possibly the keyboard, especially in portrait QWERTY mode, where the keys are small making it hard for those with fat thumbs/fingers to type well. The lack of a trackball/trackpad makes editing mistakes harder due to Android’s primitive way to selecting text and moving the keyboard caret is only possibly by touching the screen. This is a current Android issue for all devices but devices with a trackball/trackpad can use that to easily move the caret accurately. However this is solved in Gingerbread (2.3) as seen here.

Now the CPU is not as fast as higher end phones but it generally sufficient for almost all applications. The limitations of the CPU are generally only seen when gaming: Angry Birds is playable and is generally smooth on simple levels. On more complicated levels where there is a lot of physics calculations, it’s CPU limit will be seen: it will generally take a while for the level to initialize and you can clearly see it as the movement is choppy or there is some slowdown. Games like Tank Hero are also playable thanks to the GPU but there is a lag when the first shot is fired: after that the gameplay is smooth.

Customized LG partsLG has customized the following parts of stock Android

  • LG Launcher
  • Keyboard: the LG keyboard has options to be QWERTY or T9 input in portrait mode
  • Notification drawer toggle butotns
  • Camera application

LG Launcher
The launcher has a 5 home screens by default, but can be customized to 7. They have customized the look of the home screen a bit but it’s nothing too drastic. There is also a customized application drawer that separates applications into “Applications” and “Downloads” by default. “Applications” is a category for applications that come with the phone (and can’t be deleted) where as “Downloads” as the name

Keyboard
There is a custom LG keyboard which has 2 modes in portrait mode: phone keypad layout or keyboard layout. I find the portrait keyboard too cramped due to the small physical size of the screen and I like the phone keypad layout as it makes it easier to type with a single hand. The lack of a optical/physical scroll ball is helped with the left and right arrows in the phone keypad layout allow you to move the cursor accordingly, but it is only available in the phone keypad layout.

When you rotate the device, a landscape keyboard will show (no matter which portrait keyboard mode is used) and it does take up a lot of space. It feel uncomfortable to use as the buttons seem too big and perhaps there is too much thumb travel.

At times, auto-suggestion slows the keyboard down and makes it lag behind your keypresses and can be annoying at times. Changing the keyboard doesn’t allow usage of the same dictionary so when I changed to the standard Android keyboard, auto-suggestion does not work the same. I’m not sure if this is an Android issue / keyboard issue / LG customization issue. I think the biggest problem could be the keyboard of this device, but could be changed to alternatives such as Swype, SwiftKey Keyboard,Better Keyboard and more to suit your specific needs.

Another keyboard issue has recently cropped up. When auto-suggestion is turned when in the phone keypad layout: When I press the “4” button to type “I” and press space for it to auto-complete “I”, it has started to insert a space instead, it seems to affect any single character words including punctuations. This get’s very annoying and I’ve tried deletion the dictionary and playing with the settings to no avail: perhaps a hard factory reset/full wipe is needed.

Notification Drawer Toggle Buttons
LG has implemented nice toggle controls on the top of the notification drawer allowing quick toggling of WiFi, Bluetooth, GPS, 3G and Phone Silent.

Camera Application
The camera application has been customized and the settings are exposed on the left side of the screen allowing easy access for tweaking. In the camera app, keeping the button depressed will activate the focus but sadly there is no touch to focus and in video mode, the focus is fixed. Video recorded is saved as a 3gp file and picture/video quality isn’t fantastic but gets the job done.

Office Document Compatibility
The Optimus One comes with ThinkFree Office which supports Microsoft office documents: both old and new formats (doc, docx, ppt, pptx, xls, xlsx). The only issue that it does time some time to open a file. Some features that are supported are:

All apps: Document, Spreadsheet, Presentation

  • Insert images, photo, scribble
  • Font Size, Bold Italic, Superscript, Subscript, Colour
  • Text Alignment
  • Find in document
  • Add objects (pictures, hand drawn)

Spreadsheet

  • Worksheets
  • Formulas
  • Borders
  • Alignment
  • Cell Colour

Presentation

  • Create slides (with different template / layout)
  • Slide Colour
  • Slideshow

PDF viewing seems pretty good: it may take some time to load image heavy pages but it’s not really an issue. I tested with 300+ page documentation manuals and some 13MB+ comics and it was a good experience, with the only issue is the screen seems a bit physical small for reading things.

Browsing, YouTube, Videos
Browsing is generally good, the slower CPU may render pages slower than high end devices but it’s not much of an issue especially if you use Opera Mobile or Opera Mini. Sadly Flash is not supported due the device not meeting the minimum system requirements for Flash (to screen resolution too low & processor not fast enough).YouTube videos embedded on webpages can be seen on the page itself. Touch the embedded to watch the video in the YouTube application is good (it seems that this only works on some websites and I’m not sure what exactly allows this support on some pages). It can play YouTube videos in high quality smooth (the HQ button in the bottom right of the application is activated).

For videos it can play 640×360 MP4 video encoded in H264 with AAC audio (the typical Revision3 video format) smoothly without transcoding. FLV files (files from Youtube downloaded via the DownloadHelper extension in Firefox) can only be played using a 3rd party video player. I used Rockplayer to test playback and it only supports software decoding which results in smooth playback of only the lower resolutions as it relies on the CPU which won’t perform well for this. (400×166 resolution Tron trailer played fine encoded in flv video, mp3 audio played smoothly. 640×266 resolution trailer encoded in h264 video, aac audio in did not play back smoothly).

Battery Life
I can say the LG Optimus One has pretty good battery life if you only use WiFi as using 3G data really uses a lot of power. With 3G on and with account syncing enabled the phone will typically last from 7am-3pm but if you keep it on WiFi it can easily last the entire day. I’ve used the device for over 24 hours when only using Wi-Fi both at home and in the office. I did find a minor issue for power users: the device will not charge via USB from a computer when tethering 3G over WiFi or Bluetooth: it will instead just slowly discharge. However, if you use the supplied charger connected to a wall plug it will charge which is not ideal but at least it is possible to act as a MiFi as get charged (tethering used about 20% of battery per hour).

Other Issues / Problems
Main Issues:

  • Low application storage space
  • Sometimes the screen gets unresponsive and usually happens when the phone gets warm. Usually pressing the power button to switch the screen off, then on again resolves this problem
  • Sometimes the keyboard response lags behind pressing the buttons when it seems like it is trying to compute the auto-suggested words. This can get pretty annoying especially if you type fast. A work around for this is to disable XT9 or autocomplete meaning that you will have to spell all the words correctly. If you don’t you will have the pain for trying to edit words that you have previously typed. This is made harder with the lack of a trackball/trackpad to move the caret easily

Minor Issues:

  • No (optical) trackball: scrolling requires flicking on the screen
  • No notification light: this forces the user to switch on the device just to view if there are any notifications
  • Cannot charge via computer USB while tethering
  • Bluetooth tethering problem: the tethering would sometimes disconnect giving an error and I would not be able to enable 3G on the phone after that. Powering the phone off and back on resolved it but this stops me from being able to use Bluetooth tethering reliably
  • No Flash in the browser
  • No front-facing camera
  • No camera flash
  • Image/Video quality not that great

Summary
All in all, I think this is the best budget Android phone around at the moment. The HTC Wildfire S may be a good alternative offering the similar specifications but will have HTC customizations which some people are a fan of. However the Wildfire S is still not available in Brunei but will probably be more expensive. If the on-screen keyboard is a possible issue, the Samsung i5510 for B$369 seems like a good alternative, although it has a slightly smaller screen resolution.

LG Optimus One P500 Video Review

This is a long overdue video that has been sitting in iMovie for a long time. I decided to just publish it as I don’t think I have the time to do a ‘perfect’ video review. Will do a more complete text review in the near future.

Video mentions/shows:

  • Overview – Hardware / Experience
  • LG customizations
  • Angry Birds playability
  • Video playback
  • Office document support
  • PDF reading

A more complete full blog post and follow up videos will come in the due time. Overall it’s a great phone with the main shortcoming of the low/limited app storage space and some keyboard issues (to be detailed in follow-up text post)

Hello Android: Why I chose the LG Optimus One

So I have an Android device as I recently bought an LG-P500 also know as the Optimus One from Incomm’s website for a great deal of B$338. I hadn’t heard much of this phone previous to buying it as it’s not one of the ‘super-phones’ with all the fancy features but albeit it is a great Froyo equipped device (by default) with enough RAM to let it have a fluid interface when using it. First and foremost the details on the Incomm website is wrong: it has a capacitive screen not a resistive screen and it also has multi-touch (and thus has pinch-to-zoom).

I’ve honestly been looking out for a budget Android phone that will Froyo and this is the closest to my requirements. I can’t justify, to myself, a phone that costs more than B$400, so phones like the HTC Desire are out of the picture. I was slightly interested Huawei U8230 that Bmobile sold recently but it seemed like an end-of-life device with 2.1 being the last firmware update. Other budget Android phones would be:

Another notable device that I didn’t really see or play around with was Samsung Spica (B$388) though at that price, there isn’t much reason not to go for the Optimus One

I wanted a device with an HVGA resolution screen (480×320) as it makes it’s easier for surfing the web without the need to be constantly scrolling through the webpage. That only left the GT540 (the X10’s and Wildfire both have 320×240 screens, and the Galaxy 3 has a 400×240 screen) which has a small 3″ screen with a resistive touch screen. While it was pretty smooth and sensitive when I played with it the small screen made typing pretty hard. The Galaxy 3 has a non-typical screen resolution and while lower than the Optimus One resolution, it is the same physical size at 3.2″ meaning text will look bigger on the Galaxy 3 when compared to the Optimus One.

RAM is more than enough at 512MB to allow smooth(er) multi-tasking and allows for more caching of data if reading large/graphic intensive PDF files. This plays a major part for the overall usability of the device. I can say the Optimus One is pretty snappy and never had an issue of being forced to close/kill tasks. I’ve never needed to use the task manager to close applications in order for the device to be smooth and snappy.

A large 1500mAh battery which seems to have good reviews. I’ve had a pretty good experience last Sunday with 3G on from 7am – 630pm (with no real configuration) but truth be told, I can’t seem to replicate this as of yet, perhaps as I’ve been using it quite a bit or could be some misbehaving apps / syncing issues (an inherent Android problem I believe). Though that being said I crave for Nokia battery life where it wasn’t really an issue to be concerned with.

Other notable features

  • Custom LG keyboard to enable phone keypad in portrait mode. I actually prefer this, especially coming from a Nokia background and I honestly love the Nokia seems to have single hand use almost perfect. On-screen left and right cursors allow moving the cursor left and right which is good option as the device has no physical / optical trackball for scrolling or text selection.
  • Froyo: with features such as performance tweaking, being able to move some data application to SD card and tethering via USB/WiFi I consider Froyo as a standard for all Android devices to come with. Lower versions of Android will typically have lower performance and even have application limitations (not having some applications available to install on the device). Make budget phones do not have 2.2 by default.
  • Accelerometer: so it auto rotates in accordance to the orientation of the device

Some issues / tradeoffs

  • 3.2″ screen: pretty small screen to typing on in portrait mode with the on screen QWERTY keyboard
  • No trackball/trackpad
  • No notification light
  • No auto brightness
  • No camera flash / forward facing camera
  • Limited space to install applications: the stock installation only has 170MB of space to install applications. Being able to move applications to the SD card (this will only move some parts of the application to the SD card and it can’t install the ) helps a bit, but this is another annoying Android issue where the device can’t use the entire SD card to install applications and only has a small section of it’s internal storage to install applications.
  • There is no / little LG customization of Android. They have a slightly customized LG homescreen & application launcher but it isn’t anything like HTC’s Sense, Samsung’s TouchWiz or Sony Ericsson’s Timescape custom user interfaces. These customizations and usability is always a personal preference and you can always install a 3rd party launcher (I’m currently using Launcher Pro)

With about a week using the device and Android, there are more things to be said about them both, and that will come in due time. Have a happy new year everybody!