1. The lack of a headphone jack. The Mytouch comes with an enhanced mini usb port and no built-in headphone jack. The adapter supplied with the phone supports a 3.5mm plug, but if you have a headset with a 2.5mm plug you're out of luck as far as T-Mobile is concerned. The good news is that the folks at PCH Cables sell this, which works fine. Best of all, it's less than $9 including USPS first-class shipping.
2. On the subject of accessories, I've never understood why cellular providers don't have a full complement of accessories available when phones are released. You have new buyers ready to buy more stuff, and it's not there. The good news: the Android Central Store has a lot of reasonably priced accessories, including a battery for 60% of T-Mobile's price.
3. The Android auto-complete feature is awful. Turn it off immediately. Go to settings | locale and text | Android keyboard |Auto-complete . You're welcome.
4. You need to get your contact information into the phone. See my post about how to do this by importing to Google contacts.
The criticisms in the reviews are pretty shallow. Yes, T-Mobile could have shipped the phone with more than 4gb on the SDHC card, but it's *replaceable*. You can upgrade if you need more space. Yes, Exchange integration is poor but it's a Google phone. Yes, for many the G1 was a disappointing phone but this isn't a G1. Yes there are only 6000 apps instead of 50,000, but what matters is whether the app you need is there.
Most importantly, all indications are that there will be be numerous Android phones coming to market over the next 12 months. The apps will follow.
In my mind the legitimate criticism of Android is the lack of multi-touch. Since the phone is multi-touch capable (you can install multi-touch on a rooted G1 or MyTouch), the guess is that Apple is somehow preventing Google from shipping with multi-touch enabled. But then again, maybe not.
I think this is a great phone.
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