I got an Evo at I/O and I'm new to Android. Is there any way to install a stock Google Android distribution on this phone? So far my impression is that the UI is awful, but I'm not sure how much of it is due to "HTC Sense" and how much is just Android.
I don't particularly care about losing the ability to upgrade from one version of Android to the next; a wipe is fine.
I've been using Android phones since December 2008 and I also hate HTC's Sense UI. Let me tell you that the standard Android UI is much much better. I'm also looking for a way to completely kill the existing os and do a clean install of vanila Android, but I haven't found anything yet.
Hmm, the freedom to hack the phone without jumping through hoops was, for me, one of the major attractions of Android over the iPhone. An effective vendor OS lock-in makes Android a lot less appealing to me, especially when the usability of the vendor OS is markedly worse than iPhone OS.
Indeed, it is disappointing that carriers are doing this. I suppose Google has the power to stop them if it wishes, but that might require a rewriting of the Android license agreement. I don't know, I'm not an expert on this stuff.
I currently have four Android phones, but I only really use my N1 since Sense is basically unusable compared to standard Android in my opinion. If only the UI were configurable, I might use all four.
Google could rewrite the android license agreement, but that would make the platform less appealing. HTC would stay in the game but it's questionable whether the slackers like Sony Ericsson would.
The awful truth about Android is that while Apple and Google know software, none of the people Google is partnering with, handset makers or telecoms, do. None of them understand what it takes to make high-quality, defect free software, or what 3rd party developers need from a platform, or what end-users expect from software. I can tell you that having sold to and consulted for them, and having family members who've worked for them, the telecoms are particularly clueless about these things. Hence we have them selling new smartphone with Android 1.5, in spite of the damage this does to the android development world.
I got an Evo at I/O also and, while I really like some of the phone's features (I'm typing this now on 4g wirelessly tethered to my Macbook) the Sense UI is very annoying. I turned it off a few days ago and the phone's been much more usable.
It's also annoying that the Sprint NASCAR app and Sprint Football app can't be removed through the normal ways. You can remove from the desktop but they're still in the phone.
Is the fractioning of Android a problem? A person has to go through a fairly non-intuitive process to turn of sense, requiring a guide to figure it out. It will not occur to most people that this is even an option.
The new phone sounds pretty amazing, but is it a problem that people are going to have to relearn how to use their phone?
I'm speaking from an average consumer point of view, not us hacker geeks here on HN. Most people are not as adaptable to new technology as the audience is here.
Apple is now lagging in terms of features, but the user experience is consistent across devices. I know when I buy my new iPhone next month, the transition process will be seamless. Nothing will have to be re-figured out or relearned. I will know exactly how to do everything I need to do. This quality user experience is hard to quantify on a feature list, but I believe is very valuable nonetheless.
"Nothing will have to be re-figured out or relearned."
Phew, sounds like the iPhone must be hard to learn to use; a lot of investment? Every time I buy a new make of phone I need to learn how that make (and sometimes model) works. I just suck it up in the knowledge that learning is part of life. I've only used one Android phone (with Sense UI) so I can't comment on how different it is from vanilla Android. But I managed to pick it up fairly quickly, to the extent that the differences from iPhone OS that initially annoyed me, I started to prefer in a few days.
It's not necessarily a matter of it being hard in a "I can't figure out how to do this!" way, but just in the amount of cognitive effort that's required to learn how to do things a new way. Including unlearning the muscle memory of doing them the old way.
So it's a matter of comfort and ease, things that are especially important on such personal devices.
Seriously? Thank you for letting me know; I was going to get an Evo on the 4th but not after learning this. I'm glad I didn't find this out after purchasing.
I'm surprised nobody in the hacking community has figured out a way to completely replace the HTC Sense/Motoblur/Samsung TouchWiz UI to the default Android UI.
I really don't get why people don't like the Sense UI?
I've had the G1 and now the N1, but i think the Sense UI i've tested on the G1 with some Hero-ROM was awesome.. it just was far too slow for the G1.
Have to agree with you, what I don't get from a UI perspective is the plus sign on the bottom bar of your homescreen. It's there to add icons/apps to your homescreens but how often is that going to happen that you need a button for the purpose all of the time. Long-touching an app or blank space gives you the same options. It's just a waste of space.
Alternate UI's should be optional,if only for faster OS upgrades.
I just think that Froyo has taken care of the last problems that Sense used to solve. I used to like Sense for the browser multi-touch and the phone icon at the bottom of the home screen at all times. That's no longer an issue, so what's the point? Plus, the stock Android keyboard doesn't look like a Christmas tree
It puzzles me why phone vendors would invest money into writing and maintaining a layer of marketing-heavy UI when most people would probably be perfectly happy with standard Android.
I don't particularly care about losing the ability to upgrade from one version of Android to the next; a wipe is fine.