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Droid font review
Droid font review











droid font review droid font review

With medium-sized or larger hands, your fingers can grasp right around those beveled edges and rubber curves to keep the phone secure, though there is one disadvantage: you have to be careful not to let the Droid jump out of your hands when sliding open the hinge. All in all, I'm pretty pleased with the new style and ergonomics, because the Droid 3 was an ugly tank of a utilitarian device, and while the Droid 4 isn't any easier to stuff in a pocket (it's practically the exact same size) the grip feels quite nice. The only real departure from existing phones is around back: instead of the smooth Kevlar or silky soft-touch plastic gracing previous handsets, Motorola's added a slightly harder rubber with a textured finish. There's still no physical camera button, a bit of a shame there.

droid font review

The Droid 4 has the same beveled edges and camera module placement as the RAZR, even as familiar Droid 3 components jut out of every edge, including the same neatly cloven volume rocker on the right, annoyingly shallow power button at top center, and Micro USB / Micro HDMI combination at the bottom left hand corner. The Droid 4 is a straight mashup of the Droid RAZR and Droid 3, no question there: put the three handsets on a table and you'll see connections everywhere.













Droid font review