On the Friday before Memorial Day, after years of aggravation with the AT&T network on my iPhone, I walked into a Sprint store to look at an EVO. A friend has an EVO and has always spoken so highly of the Sprint network in New York City. That Friday was the tipping point for me - after dropping what had to be my thousandth AT&T phone call, I had enough and headed over to the Sprint store. After talking with the salesman about his EVO and his impressions of it (very favorable), I picked up a demo of the Nexus S 4G and was thoroughly impressed. On a whim, I decided to break my contract with AT&T and sign on with Sprint and the Nexus S 4G.
From the moment of set up until today, the phone has been exceptionally impressive. Everything on the phone moves fast - app switching, notifications, app usage - the Nexus S 4G flies. I've integrated the phone with my Google Voice account; everything just works seamlessly. On the Sprint network, maybe I was just so angry at the way the AT&T network has been in the New York City area, but using Sprint has been outstanding. Even when my phone shows only one bar, phone calls and 3G connectivity work as they should. The Sprint 4G network has thoroughly impressed me. Since moving to AT&T when the first iPhone came out, I was never able to make calls or send texts, receive calls of texts, use the 3G or even the EDGE network at Yankee Stadium due simply to network congestion. This week, my first visit with my Nexus S 4G, not only could I do everything I couldn't do on the AT&T network, the 4G network was available and was blazingly fast.
It was funny sitting near three people who had iPhones and were frustrated with the inability to send texts.
Coming from the iOS platform, I've needed a slight learning curve with the Android OS. At times, there are additional 'taps' that need to be performed on certain functions (deletion of voicemails, as an example) where on iOS, it was just swipe and tap "DELETE." Otherwise, the latest Android OS build seems solid.
Not that the phone has been perfect --- I have had signal strength issues. There are times when the phone shows little or no connectivity to either 3G or my wi-fi network; I've been able to use the phone, but the signal strength is something that needs fixing. The GPS is not the best, but a Sprint tech said that the GPS and other signal issues are software problems that will be cleaned up through a software update.
From the moment of set up until today, the phone has been exceptionally impressive. Everything on the phone moves fast - app switching, notifications, app usage - the Nexus S 4G flies. I've integrated the phone with my Google Voice account; everything just works seamlessly. On the Sprint network, maybe I was just so angry at the way the AT&T network has been in the New York City area, but using Sprint has been outstanding. Even when my phone shows only one bar, phone calls and 3G connectivity work as they should. The Sprint 4G network has thoroughly impressed me. Since moving to AT&T when the first iPhone came out, I was never able to make calls or send texts, receive calls of texts, use the 3G or even the EDGE network at Yankee Stadium due simply to network congestion. This week, my first visit with my Nexus S 4G, not only could I do everything I couldn't do on the AT&T network, the 4G network was available and was blazingly fast.
It was funny sitting near three people who had iPhones and were frustrated with the inability to send texts.
Coming from the iOS platform, I've needed a slight learning curve with the Android OS. At times, there are additional 'taps' that need to be performed on certain functions (deletion of voicemails, as an example) where on iOS, it was just swipe and tap "DELETE." Otherwise, the latest Android OS build seems solid.
Not that the phone has been perfect --- I have had signal strength issues. There are times when the phone shows little or no connectivity to either 3G or my wi-fi network; I've been able to use the phone, but the signal strength is something that needs fixing. The GPS is not the best, but a Sprint tech said that the GPS and other signal issues are software problems that will be cleaned up through a software update.