- Jul 21, 2010
- 100
- 1
- 18
I really like my S III, and I don't have the complaints that some others do. It's a great phone ... except for the audio quality. I plug in a pair of ear buds and the wash and hiss is so distracting it makes listening to music unpleasant. I was recently appeased somewhat by installing the Faux kernel and FauxSound, and it turned out that a lot of the wash was simply the result of a gain that was too high. (This isn't too surprising considering one of the biggest complaints about the international S III, which came out first, was the low volume of the audio. On that model, though, you could increase the gain by editing a config file rather than having to change out the kernel.)
So I was pretty disappointed when the GSMArena tests showed that the Galaxy S 4 suffered from lower quality audio, as well. (And happy as it meant my decision to not buy a phone was pretty much made for me.)
I found out today that they screwed up their test (and they received the final firmware update): Samsung Galaxy S4 review: Supernova - GSMArena.com
(Ignore the HTC One in the linked comparison chart. It was also re-tested and had much better results than the old scores embedded in the Galaxy S 4 review.)
It turns out that the Snapdragon Galaxy S 4 has the best audio quality of any phone they've tested. I didn't expect that from Qualcomm considering the performance we've seen so far.
This change makes my decision a lot more difficult. I'm still going to wait for Google I/O and go into a store with a set of earbuds to hear for myself, but this phone just went from "definitely not" to "I'm listening...".
So I was pretty disappointed when the GSMArena tests showed that the Galaxy S 4 suffered from lower quality audio, as well. (And happy as it meant my decision to not buy a phone was pretty much made for me.)
I found out today that they screwed up their test (and they received the final firmware update): Samsung Galaxy S4 review: Supernova - GSMArena.com
(Ignore the HTC One in the linked comparison chart. It was also re-tested and had much better results than the old scores embedded in the Galaxy S 4 review.)
It turns out that the Snapdragon Galaxy S 4 has the best audio quality of any phone they've tested. I didn't expect that from Qualcomm considering the performance we've seen so far.
This change makes my decision a lot more difficult. I'm still going to wait for Google I/O and go into a store with a set of earbuds to hear for myself, but this phone just went from "definitely not" to "I'm listening...".