This is a tad bit off topic but I didn't want to start another thread but lets say we get the DNA, how long do we have if we want to trade it in for a Note2 etc? Last year they had a pretty large window to return the phone.
Hey Phil, I was wondering if you could comment on the brightness level of the DNA's screen at max brightness. I love bright screens and have always kept my phones' "automatic brightness" controls disabled so the phone can always be on max. That was one of the primary reasons I didn't get the GS3. The screen was/is way too dark for me even at maximum brightness. I know the brightness king is the iphone 5 but I was wondering if you found the DNA's screen to be adequately bright? Also one or two reviewers have mentioned a "bluish cast" to the screen. Have you compared the whites of this phone on the google home page to other, competing phones? Are the whites truly white? I'm a current owner of the Gnex and the horrible yellowish cast on what's supposed to be white has driven me nuts.
TIA!
Looking at people that are A.) more reputable *cough android police* and B.) Have spent significant time testing the battery I would say The Verge really screwed that review up. You should never use a phone once and make all assumptions from that one use. Everything I have read is that the battery life is great and WILL last all day. As far as speed, I'm sure it is right on par with the nexus 4, the only difference is that the nexus 4 is bloatfree (my DNA will be the moment the first ROM comes out) and is also on 4.2 instead of 4.1.2. That makes a difference in benchmarks, and also user-ability.Yup. Not surprised. The big quotes are:
1. It?s certainly a phone that requires a trip to the battery charger at least once, possibly even twice, during the day to make it to the evening.
2. The DNA just doesn?t feel as fast as the Nexus 4 in pretty much everything ? despite its very high benchmark scores.
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Looking at people that are A.) more reputable *cough android police* and B.) Have spent significant time testing the battery I would say The Verge really screwed that review up. You should never use a phone once and make all assumptions from that one use. Everything I have read is that the battery life is great and WILL last all day. As far as speed, I'm sure it is right on par with the nexus 4, the only difference is that the nexus 4 is bloatfree (my DNA will be the moment the first ROM comes out) and is also on 4.2 instead of 4.1.2. That makes a difference in benchmarks, and also user-ability.
I'm curious why everyone says The Verge screwed up here.
Their testing methodology may be flawed, as none of us will ever sit there for 4 hours continuously visiting web sites and downloading high resolution photos, but it IS still a repeatable (on their end, I hope) test that had some fairly controlled variables, as any "benchmark" should.
Furthermore, as I noted in my post earlier, although The Verge's review put the battery life at "only" 4 and a half hours, it was 4 and a half hours of continuous usage, with the screen on. (I can't tell, but to me, it only stands to be logical that a benchmark about visiting websites would have the display remain on.)
AndroidPolice, the so-called "more reputable" source gives a different take in their review, and their methodology mirrors the average user much more closely, but is also subject to way more variance.
In this case, since the phone was not continuously used/abused, it went on very strongly for over 27 hours. Very respectable, and most of that was good idle power management.
However, note that even in AndroidPolice's review, the total amount of "Screen on" time remained in the 4 hour range - the same exact range that The Verge arrived at.
I am quite intrigued.
This is a tad bit off topic but I didn't want to start another thread but lets say we get the DNA, how long do we have if we want to trade it in for a Note2 etc? Last year they had a pretty large window to return the phone.
14 days
The Nottinator
I think The Verge is not known as well for these kinds of things. For the most part, people do not care, nor should they, how long their phone will last if they constantly tax the processor and screen to kill the battery as fast as possible. This information is not really helpful, and ends up scaring the less knowledgeable consumer. If I hear that the Verge tested a phone I'm looking at and they tell me it's gonna last for 5-6 hours I won't want to get it. The other thing that bothers me is that they take that extreme test, and then say that you will most likely have to charge your phone 1-2 times every day! That is not what it means. Real world tests are what we actually care about. That tells us what we can expect if we are to purchase and use this device. That is why I'm saying they screwed up. The point of a review is to give USEFUL information, what they did with the battery is scare people. Real reviewers know enough to use the phone for a few days before giving a solid review on the battery. The guys at android police know this, and only posted information on it because people are freaking out about it. Heck Phil hasn't talked much about battery, because he said he needs to use the device for a couple days to know what it really is capable of. *end rant*
Looking at people that are A.) more reputable *cough android police* and B.) Have spent significant time testing the battery I would say The Verge really screwed that review up. You should never use a phone once and make all assumptions from that one use. Everything I have read is that the battery life is great and WILL last all day. As far as speed, I'm sure it is right on par with the nexus 4, the only difference is that the nexus 4 is bloatfree (my DNA will be the moment the first ROM comes out) and is also on 4.2 instead of 4.1.2. That makes a difference in benchmarks, and also user-ability.
Right, I understand that, but TheVerge released numbers based off a benchmark, rather than usage.
Benchmarks are inherently very taxing, and yes, technically it was a flawed approach as no one actually sits there doing those things continuously until their phone dies.
However, as I noted, the numbers that TheVerge and AndroidPolice arrived at, along with several users on this forum who have it already, all match up quite nicely.
TheVerge's taxing benchmark ran for 4 hours and 25 minutes. From 100% to 0%.
AndroidPolice technically ran a lot longer, 27 hours and 30 minutes, but in the end, the total amount of "Screen on time" matched what TheVerge found - 4 hours and 8 minutes of screen on, phone being used, sometimes quite heavily. In fact, TheVerge has a 17 minute advantage, which is to say that the amount of power consumed in that time running full tilt in their benchmark was roughly equivalent to the amount of power lost through idling for nearly a full day. (This is not a direct proportion of course, because there are many other variables involved in the battery capacity, consumption and discharge rates.)
I imagine the only reason that people are complaining is that if you only look at the one number from TheVerge, you would have no real idea on the long-term idle consumption rate. However, to say it is a useless review is a bit much, IMO. It provides much needed information from a different angle, that when taken together with all the other information, start to present to us a common trend. I'll refrain from the fanboy/hater explanation.![]()
The thing is they used the same test on the GS3 and got a worse result and yet they said the battery was average and gave it an 8. the DNA lasted longer and they gave it a 4 and said it was terrible.
Having a testing methodology is great, but you have to use it properly.
Don't underestimate non-removable batteries. My iPhone 4 from a year and half ago that I gave to a relative is still just as good as it was when I bought it. It outlasts my S3 and the S3's battery is amazing. Additionally, my brother works at Verizon, and he says that with unibody (non-removable) phones, if anything were to go wrong with your phone, the warranty covers it and you just get an entirely new phone; which I am okay with.
Looking at people that are A.) more reputable *cough android police* and B.) Have spent significant time testing the battery I would say The Verge really screwed that review up. You should never use a phone once and make all assumptions from that one use. Everything I have read is that the battery life is great and WILL last all day. As far as speed, I'm sure it is right on par with the nexus 4, the only difference is that the nexus 4 is bloatfree (my DNA will be the moment the first ROM comes out) and is also on 4.2 instead of 4.1.2. That makes a difference in benchmarks, and also user-ability.