My First 10 Years With Android
I left the Vodafone store at a shopping mall near Milan, Italy, in the early afternoon of a summer day. Precisely at 02:24pm on August 26, 2009, as printed on the receipt of the HTC Magic Android smartphone I had just bought for €449. It was my first Android device, 10 years ago today.
Google unveiled Android in November 2007 and HTC released the first consumer Android device in September 2008. I’d say I qualify as an early adopter.
Until that summer I had owned two feature phones, an Ericsson R320s and a Nokia 6151. WAP2 on the Nokia seemed an experience straight out of science fiction. But there were things I wanted on the go that only a smartphone could do easily, such as email, Twitter, and real-time text chat. Although the iPhone was already popular, Android looked promising and as a Google enthusiast I was committed to its ecosystem.
The HTC Magic shipped with Android 1.5 Cupcake, soon replaced with the 1.6 Donut OTA update.
The first days with the HTC Magic taught me a lot on smartphone hardware and Android. When a full battery charge barely lasted a full day, I realized it wasn’t a good idea to turn on notifications for Gmail and several other apps, as well as GPS. It was a great surprise given my feature phones lasted a solid week.
Back in those very early days there was no choice as the only Android devices were manufactured by vendors such as HTC with a strong input from Google. Indeed, my HTC Magic featured a prominent Google logo on the back.
But with time I came to appreciate Google’s stock Android experience, to the point I’ve been buying exclusively Google-made or branded Android devices since then. Here are all the ones I owned:
Ten years later, I’m still very happy with Android and Google devices and look forward to the platform’s evolution.
The purchase receipt of my first Android device, an HTC Magic smartphone. I bought it for €449 at 02:24pm on August 26, 2009. |
Google unveiled Android in November 2007 and HTC released the first consumer Android device in September 2008. I’d say I qualify as an early adopter.
Until that summer I had owned two feature phones, an Ericsson R320s and a Nokia 6151. WAP2 on the Nokia seemed an experience straight out of science fiction. But there were things I wanted on the go that only a smartphone could do easily, such as email, Twitter, and real-time text chat. Although the iPhone was already popular, Android looked promising and as a Google enthusiast I was committed to its ecosystem.
The HTC Magic shipped with Android 1.5 Cupcake, soon replaced with the 1.6 Donut OTA update.
The first days with the HTC Magic taught me a lot on smartphone hardware and Android. When a full battery charge barely lasted a full day, I realized it wasn’t a good idea to turn on notifications for Gmail and several other apps, as well as GPS. It was a great surprise given my feature phones lasted a solid week.
Back in those very early days there was no choice as the only Android devices were manufactured by vendors such as HTC with a strong input from Google. Indeed, my HTC Magic featured a prominent Google logo on the back.
But with time I came to appreciate Google’s stock Android experience, to the point I’ve been buying exclusively Google-made or branded Android devices since then. Here are all the ones I owned:
- HTC Magic
- Nexus S
- Nexus 4
- Nexus 5
- Nexus 6
- Nexus 6P
- Pixel 2 XL
- Pixel 4 XL
- Nexus 7 (2012)
- Nexus 7 (2013)
Ten years later, I’m still very happy with Android and Google devices and look forward to the platform’s evolution.