- Apr 21, 2009
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If the display is that much better, and displays are Samsungs "forte," then what the hell went wrong?
Certainly appreciate the comparison, and if I had extraneous dollars I might make the leap myself.
Nothing really went wrong. It comes down to display differences. Samsung is pushing their own SAMOLED technology and thus their displays are of that kind. HTC has partnered with a manufacturer that uses SLCD (2?) technology.
Even though I am a proud owner of a Galaxy Nexus, I held the belief even when I first purchased it that SLCD is superior on mobile phones for the very reasons Phil goes into in his comparison: they are typically used outside in bright lighting conditions, and LCD is better for that due to it's brightness. The display technology HTC is using apparently continues this trend. Heck, even my OG Droid has a brighter display outdoors than the Nexus. However, when it comes to deep blacks, the Nexus trumps it.
Having said all that, while I enjoyed Phil's comparison, the "Updates and Hacking" section needs to be expanded. Any comparison to a Nexus device must include an in-depth explanation of the different methods of hacking required/available on each phone.
Brandon
Having said all that, while I enjoyed Phil's comparison, the "Updates and Hacking" section needs to be expanded. Any comparison to a Nexus device must include an in-depth explanation of the different methods of hacking required/available on each phone.
We do think about these things.
The Snapdragon S4 is in the LTE version, which benchmarks better than the quad core and uses less battery.
With the quality of the Android apps right now, I'm not feeling very confident that many would actually use quad core.
It boggles my mind that a decision would be made to use screen real estate for buttons.
That is my point exactly. The display is 1280x720 and the button bar is within that resolution. I'm not sure if the button bar hides on the Galaxy Nexus, it doesn't in Honeycomb, thats for sure.I'm not smart enough to know the answer to this one, and it may be a dumb question. The Nexus doesn't have these buttons and ICS adds them in, right? So when those buttons are there being displayed on the Nexus does that mean the display is smaller than 1280x720? Or does it mean when you run an app, like youtube, that removes those buttons and takes over the full screen that it becomes larger than 1280x720?
I guess the reason why I ask is that we know that these OEMs are stuff all sorts of stuff into these tiny little form factors if that is space that wouldn't be used by the screen anyway, why not just make it buttons?