The most important is Nextbus, also a bike ride mapping app, Last.fm, Yelp, and Shazam.
Yes: Nextbus, yelp, Shazam
I'll check on last.fm tomorrow, but I'm 99.9% positive that at&t didn't block it (I have it on my Galaxy S). The bike map app I'd need more info, but I'm sure there are equivalents.
Another Droid question -- is there a way to easily rent movies, as one can do on the Iphone thru Itunes?
My phone has an app called the Samsung Media Hub that allows you to rent movies, but you can only watch them on your phone. That would be the type of thing at&t would block though, so I'll check tomorrow.
mspot will let you rent directly to your phone, and I'm pretty sure youtube will too (they have a movie rental section). Blockbuster, Netflix, RedBox and Amazon are all planning similar apps.
The phone is DLNA compliant as well, so you can share those movies with most other DLNA compliant devices.
the only remaining question would be how long before that next generation of phones you mentioned is available, and how much of a difference will it really make. There's always something newer and better around the corner, but meanwhile I'm stuck with an increasingly slow and sucky Iphone.
I don't think the dual-core processors will make much of a difference over this phone. It already has a separate processor and graphics chip. I've watched many a 1080p movie on it and it's easily the most impressive feature of the phone that gets a lot of "wow"s.
The 4g network capability however, would make a HUGE difference, especially if you plan to have the phone for 2-3 years. By the end of the year, every carrier will have a 4G network that will greatly increase download speeds. If you buy the phone now, you may be missing out on new network capabilities for quite some time.
For example, I download movies and TV shows directly to my Galaxy S over Sprint's 4G network in a matter of minutes. And that was just a test as I don't watch much on phone - it sounds like you might watch a lot more on your phone then I do.