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Sports fans know these moments well: The first time Djokovic beat Federer, that time Iverson broke Jordan’s ankles. Nobody’s ever going to say Iverson was a better basketball player than Jordan, but at the time, one was young and getting better quickly, the other wasn’t.
I got to thinking about this while playing with the New Motorola RZAR the other day. Years from now, nobody’s going to call this thing a more important or groundbreaking device than the iPhone, but right now, the RAZR is better. It’s the first Android phone I like and the first phone of any kind I like better than the iPhone. Most importantly, the RAZR is an important milestone in what now seems like an inevitable trend: Android phones are improving much, much faster than the iPhone, and barring patent lawsuits or a monumental screw-up, Google could do to Apple with Android what Microsoft did with Windows a couple of decades ago.
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The Razr is, in my opinion, better than the iPhone. That doesn’t necessarily mean you should run out and get it, because better Android phones are almost certainly on the way. But it does mean that manufacturers are finally starting to figure out how to make Android-based products that aren’t just pale Apple imitations.
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