Just some video from today..
Verizon adds new Droid to line of iPhone  rivals 
    
		
		
	
	
Verizon unveiled  the Motorola Droid X on Wednesday. The new smart phone will start  selling on July 15. By 
David  Goldman, staff writerJune 23,  2010: 5:11 PM ET
NEW YORK  (CNNMoney.com) -- Verizon Wireless unveiled the latest addition to its a  successful line of Droid smart phones on Wednesday afternoon --  preempting Apple's eagerly anticipated iPhone 4 launch by a day/
The  new Motorola (
MOT,  
Fortune  500) Droid X, available exclusively on Verizon's network, will have  all the bells and whistles: a 4.3-inch display, HDMI output, 720p  high-definition video capture, an 8 megapixel camera, a 1 GHz processor  and three microphones to help with noise cancellation and call quality. 
The  phone can also store an enormous stash of videos, photos and music. It  comes with 8 gigabytes of installed memory plus an SD card featuring 16  GB of expandable memory, which can be upgraded to 40 GB. All of that  comes in a phone less than half an inch thick. 
The Droid X is  scheduled for July 15 release, and will cost $200 with a new two-year  contract. Following in AT&T's footsteps, Verizon (
VZ,  
Fortune  500) said any customer with a contract expiring in 2010 is eligible  for an early upgrade. (Want all the details? Check Fortune.com's 
live  blog of the Droid launch.) 
The Droid X is one of the first  phones to take advantage of a cool new feature in Google's latest  Android operating system update: The phone can become a Wi-Fi hotspot  for up to five devices. That add-on will cost customers an extra $20 a  month for up to 2 GB of data transmission. Each additional megabyte will  cost 5 cents.
VIDEO: (Scroll Down)  
New Verizon Droid X: Meet the anti-iPhone - Jun. 23, 2010
At  the Droid X launch event in New York, Google Chief Executive Eric  Schmidt praised the phone for its advanced capabilities -- and touted  Verizon's network for allowing users to get the full experience of the  Android OS.
"This is not a toy or an app engine," Schmidt said.   In a not-so-subtle dig at AT&T, he added: "In today's mobile world  ... you need an incredibly fast and scalable network, and it's got to  have a real operating system." 
IPhone-killing  strategy.
The new Droid is part of Verizon's attempt to outflank  chief rival AT&T (
T,  
Fortune  500) -- the iPhone's exclusive carrier -- by taking advantage of  the surging popularity of Google's (
GOOG,  
Fortune  500) Android mobile operating system to create a distinctive smart  phone brand within Verizon.
Android is a hot wave to ride. Phones  running Google's mobile OS outsold iPhones in the first quarter,  according to research group NPD. In the first three months of the year,  28% of U.S. smart phones sales were of Android phones, compared to 21%  for Apple (
AAPL,  
Fortune  500). BlackBerry maker Research in Motion (
RIMM)  continued to hold the lead, with 36% of overall sales.
Though the  Android OS may not resonate with most mainstream consumers, Verizon's  $100 million Droid marketing campaign has helped establish its Droids as  serious iPhone competitors. 
"What Verizon has tried to do is  create a 'Droid' brand of their own and establish that brand as a  stand-in for the iPhone," said Charles Golvin, an analyst with Forrester  Research. "That has been pretty successful so far." 
The Droid X  will be Verizon's fourth "Droid"-branded, Android-based smart phone and  the second new Droid in two months. Verizon's previous flagship device,  the HTC Droid Incredible, went on sale in April. 
The strategy is  paying off: Verizon sold out of Droid Incredibles almost immediately,  and the company said it won't have any in stock until mid-July. 
Meanwhile  the original, 7-month old Motorola Droid outpaced the first-generation  iPhone's sales through its first 74 days in stores, according to  research group Flurry. The Motorola Droid continues selling so well that  its manufacturer recently said it is facing shortages in its supply  chain. 
What Droid does
Droids  offer all of the smart phone basics, including a large multi-touch  screen, an app store, a video camera and, of course, the ability to  place calls. Like Android phones on other networks, Droids offer free  GPS navigation, removable batteries, true multitasking, speech  recognition software and frequent software updates. 
But unlike  other Android phones, which vary wildly in quality and price, Verizon  has limited its Droid branding to phones that are truly top of the line.  Not all make the cut: Verizon offers two non-"Droid" Android phones  (the LG Ally and Motorola Devour). 
And in a very anti-Apple  approach, each Droid has a different set of features. Want a keyboard?  Get a Motorola Droid. Want to watch video? Get a Droid X. Want a great  camera? Try the HTC Droid Incredible. Like something a bit smaller? Get  an HTC Droid Eris. 
"Clearly, Verizon has been making great  strides to bring only top-notch handsets into its Droid portfolio," said  Andy Castonguay, director of mobile and access devices research at  Yankee Group. "Verizon's strategy to have a variety of devices centered  around one core experience makes sense."
Still, there's a risk to  Verizon's approach. Each Droid runs a different user interface, some use  a slightly different version of the Android operating system, and each  has different apps available to it. And with new Droids launching at  such a rapid pace, it can be difficult for customers to keep track.
With  the iPhone, on the other hand, users know they'll have one update a  year and a full, standardized universe of apps.
"It will take some  time to see whether this is too much or too fast for Verizon," Golvin  said. "But so far, Verizon has had success in saying Droid is the  flagship brand that doesn't force you to use one set of features." 
New Verizon Droid X: Meet the anti-iPhone - Jun. 23, 2010