My small complaint with the Droid is that it doesn't store my voicemail password. With a BB you can opt to have the phone automatically enter the password when voicemail asks for it. Minor annoyance.
That out to be fixable, but I suspect that's one last vestige of the old Verizon... they want to sell you "Visual Voicemail" for $2.50 a month. That's what iPhones do automatically.. there's no server-side voicemail. When the network takes a message, it pushes it to your phone as a recording (MP3 or whatever). So when you go for voicemail, it's much more like reading texts or emails... no need to dial in.
Nice... I might have forked over another $0.50 a month, but no frickin' way do I go for $2.50. I'm expecting an app that does this to surface soon... when the DROID gets a voice-mail notification, this app would automatically call in, record the call, and store it until you delete, all free. You would have to offer your password to this app, but otherwise, it would be transparent. I might just write my own, if no one else does.
My other "issue" turned out to be not-a-problem. Droid's don't come with a user's manual. My *toaster* came with a user's manual :biggrin::biggrin:
But the Droid has an extremely intuitive design and I was able to get everything set up the way I wanted without a manual. I guess Droid Does... Green.
Yeah, I have only looked at the manual once. I probably should more, not because it's hard to use (it's not), but because it's new enough, there are lots of things in here I didn't immediately get. For example, Contacts.. I was used to selecting a contect and getting a menu of options. I had to learn that, if I extend-press the contact, I get a pop-up list right there.. much nicer. I also had to learn to say "navigate to" or "call" using the little mic icon on the main Google search widget.. very nice, but a small detail one had to learn about.
So yeah, manual is online:
Motorola Droid - User Manual
You can also download it directly from Motorola's DROID support page.