ok well of course if your phone is constantly connected then what ever uses batter is not of importance because its always getting charged... but for me my phone is only getting chared when im at home.. so its best for me to not have wifi on. Also when i was talking about wifi speed.. my laptop and phone get the same speed when i test it on speedtest.net over wifi. my laptop can load up engadget.com in under 3 seconds your droid.. well any droin cant do that even if the wifi speed was 30000mbs.. thats my point.
Actually that's a decent test to try out, my Droid on Wi-Fi against my laptop on Wi-Fi.
(Laptop is an HP Pavilion DV-1170 running WinXP)
Here's the results of the test:
Laptop download speed: 6.51 MBPS
Droid download speed: 8.074 MBPS
Laptop upload speed: 2.32 MBPS
Droid upload speed: 1.005 MBPS
My laptop got it's ass kicked by a cell phone? :icon_eek:
I didn't see THAT coming.
Running around the house the Droid isn't going to replace the iPod Touch, main reason being is I don't really care if the iPod battery runs down. It's not a phone and usually it's just playing music or playing TV Guide on
www.tv.yahoo.com
I understand what you're saying about the processor speed being a bottleneck, and you have a point there but the results of the test don't bear that out.
Back when I was doing assembly language programming, I noticed a huge difference between chip sets and speed was just one of many factors. The chip I learned the most on was the venerable Motorola MC6809E and while the clock speed seemed slow as a slug, the things it could do in the command set made up for a lot of ground. The internal registers were the real source of the power, you could do amazing things with that chip and never even touch the RAM.
The processor in the Droid has to be pretty good to smoke a dedicated laptop on the same wi-fi like it just did. Yeah, the laptop's older but still, that's impressive as heck.