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Showing posts with label samsung. Show all posts
Showing posts with label samsung. Show all posts

Friday, March 15, 2013

HTC One Review: This is Beauty and the Beast


HTC’s high-end Android flagship phone, sporting a sexy body, stunning screen and out-of-the-ordinary camera.
A review of HTC's new One smartphone

Who’s it for?
People who want the most polished and smooth Android experience available, and maybe don’t want to stretch (literally and figuratively) to the five-inch screen that’s becoming common on top-end Android phones.

Design
HTC’s always been good at making pretty phones, and the One keeps the gorgeous genes within the family. It’s got a minimalist metal construction with polycarbonate ‘accents’, which reeks of exquisite build quality. The metal construction and reassuring weight give it a chassis that feels rock-solid, and the rounded back, tapering to supermodel-skinny sides, makes it genuinely comfortable to hold in your hand.
The 4.7-inch screen is clad in Gorilla Glass, which wraps beautifully round the edge of the chassis — HTC says it ‘flows’, and it almost has a point. The glass doesn’t just stop at the edge of the screen, but contours round to give a silky-smooth edge you’ve got to feel to believe. Overall, tiny details like this conspire to make the One the most gorgeous phone I’ve laid eyes on in years, and a refreshing change from seemingly endless copycat, look-a-like phones. I’m smitten.
A review of the HTC one smartphone
The minimalist design is, sadly, carried over to the more practical side of the phone too. You won’t find a microSD card slot lurking anywhere, and as for a removable battery? Dream on. All you get is a headphone jack, micro USB for charging, a pop-out SIM tray, and a pair of buttons — a metal volume rocker, and a weird-looking power button that also doubles as an IR blaster, so you can use your phone as a TV remote.
One area HTC hasn’t skimped on is the speakers: you get two of them, on the front of the phone no less. The holes are drilled out of the aluminium  and there’s a notification LED — always a good thing in our books — lingering behind one of those holes on the top speaker.
The One’s also more than just a pretty face. Under the Gorilla Glass is a stonking great 1920x1080p display, powered by a Snapdragon 600 processor, and a sweet 2GB of RAM — the same as the Nexus 4, Sony Xperia Z or LG Optimus Pro. Don’t be fooled, though — performance on this is nippy as you like.
A review of the HTC One smartphone
Software
This thing is fast! Zipping around HTC’s well-skinned version of Android — and zip is definitely the right word — there’s nary a hint of lag or stutter. Given the processing power under the hood, that’s hardly surprising, but it’s still damn impressive. Even pushing the system with the more graphically-intensive Android games — Asphalt 7 or Real Racing 3, the One purrs along better than anything else out there.
In terms of OS, the One is running HTC’s custom Sense 5.0 on top of Android 4.1.2. Sense 5.0 sports a bunch of differences to vanilla Android, but the overall impression you’re left with is that Sense helps casual users access some of the more hardcore Android features, without needing to mess around deep inside various settings menus.
The customisable lock screens are a good example: they’re one of the things Android’s really got going for it, but normally it takes a fair bit of messing around with custom widgets to make a decent one. Sense comes preloaded with a bunch of different lock screen themes.
We won’t dive into an exhaustive rundown of all the software differences here , but suffice to say that Sense is the only manufacturer Android skin I’d seriously think about keeping on a phone.
HTC one review
Hardware
Once you’ve finished obsessing over that gorgeous body, you’ll inevitably reach for the on switch (which is a little hard to find, being almost completely flush with the body), and light up the screen. The 4.7-inch, 1920x1080p panel is incredible — forget numbers, forget stats, and just revel in what, for my money, is the best mobile display made thus far.
The PPI is obviously somewhere north of pointless (468, for those of you who get aroused by meaningless metrics), but more importantly, the screen is a competent all-rounder. Viewing angles are excellent, and you can actually read the damn thing in direct sunlight. Side-by-side with the Galaxy S III’s AMOLED display, you can see that the blacks aren’t quite as good, but that’s real nit-picking.
A review of the HTC One smartphone
Of course, if there was one feature HTC trumpeted above all else on its new phone, it was definitely the Ultrapixel. To recap: HTC’s being the good guy, going against the megapixel myth, and shipping a 4MP phone camera it reckons is not only as good as the better-endowed competition, but is actually better in low light.
Does it work? Yes. In low light, the pictures this thing cranks out are seriously impressive, managing to make out objects without having to resort to a blurry noise-fest.
A review of the HTC One camera against the Sony Xperia Z smartphone's camera
Compared against the Sony Xperia Z, one of the best Android shooters out there, the low-light performance is out of this world. In the sample images above, (which are both cropped to the same extent), the text in the One’s photo is totally readable, whereas the Sony’s is a horror show you’d be hard-pushed to find a single letter in. Obviously, those sample images are a worst-case scenario, but they prove a point — the One’s camera craps all over the competition when the Sun goes down.
We tested the low-light against a bunch of other phone cameras, and the results are impressive — the Nokia Pureview 808 wins (almost inevitably), but the One is close behind, and certainly leagues better than the blurry, noisy mess churned out by the others.
Sadly, the performance isn’t quite as stellar when it comes to everyday photography. Whether it’s due to the lack of pixels, or some other less-than-stellar component in the camera assembly, the One’s photos aren’t particularly sharp. They’re fine viewed on the phone screen or Facebook, but blow them up any bigger, and everything goes a bit marshmallow-soft. Overall, it’s fair to say the One’s packing a decent shooter, but not anything particularly revolutionary and certainly not a Lumia 920-dethroning upstart.
A review of the HTC One smartphone

Tragic Flaw
You might’ve read about Blinkfeed, HTC’s live tile/RSS feed mashup that spits out a constant news feed onto a home screen widget. You probably skimmed over it, thinking it’s another bit of bloatware crap to be discarded as soon as you start setting up the device, right? Wrong.
Blinkfeed is here to stay, as a permanent wart on your home screens. Sure, you can change it from being the default home screen, but every now and again you’re going to scroll onto your Blinkfeed page and get inadvertently slapped in the face by reality. For now, Blinkfeed is here to stay, a constant presence in your life (and probably on your data usage and battery, since you can’t disable auto-refresh).

This is Weird
The handset gets almost worryingly hot when used a lot, especially if shifting a lot of data over the mobile network. We’ll chalk it up to that metal back, and it’s certainly not a deal-breaker, but it’s still a tad disconcerting.
A review of the HTC One smartphone

Test Notes
- Oh my god the speakers are good — better than any mobile speakers have the right to be. Playing music to various people through the phone is a funny experience, and one worth trying if you’ve ever wondered what the actual definition of jaw-dropping is. It’s not so much the volume, which is definitely the best of any smartphone but hardly deafening — it’s that over the whole sound spectrum, the stuff the speakers spits out is fairly accurate and distortion-free.
I don’t know whether this is due to the Beats Audio EQ (unlikely) or the excellent dual-speaker setup (far more plausible), but the speakers on this thing are damn close to putting small travel speakers like my own Altec Lansing out of work. It’s that good.
- The IR blaster, which is embedded in the power button (now that’s what I call multitasking!), lets you use your phone as a universal remote with your TV and home theatre set-up. It’s quick and easy to configure. Moreover, the system leverages Peel to provide a personalised TV guide that ties in with the remote — just tap on a currently airing show, and your TV will switch over to that channel, as if by magic.
- Battery life is average. The One is packing a 2300mAh cell, which gets me through a full day of fairly punishing use. On a brutal video rundown, it lasted about seven hours before conking out, translating to a good day of real-world use, especially if you crank up HTC’s power saver mode, which lets you (among other things) restrict CPU usage and screen brightness.
- Internet speeds, especially web browsing, feel pretty nippy. With the chomping-at-the-bit processor under the hood, this is hardly surprising, but the One also seems to hold onto mobile signal a little bit better — in rooms and Tube stations I’d previously had marked down as dead spots, I was scraping a little bit of coverage. We’ve tested on both EE’s 4G and Vodafone’s HSPA+ network, and download speeds are exactly in line with other top-end smartphones — anything between 1 and 12Mbps, depending on signal and how much lead is in the walls.
- HTC’s get-started software merits a mention for making the getting-going procedure surprisingly slick. If you’re not restoring the phone from an HTC account backup, you can choose to do the initial setup on a computer rather than the phone — just navigate to a webpage, enter the code your phone generates, and you’re free to set up email accounts, lock screens and the like from your computer. It might sound like faff, and it’s hopefully not something you’re going to use more than once, but as someone who switches between phones with depressing regularity, not having to type out every email address and super-secure password on a touchscreen keyboard is something of a godsend.

Should You Buy It?
The One is, undoubtedly, an excellent device. It does everything well, some things — the build, screen and mind-bending speakers come to mind — superbly, with only a few entries in the negatives column. Of course, being average doesn’t cut it any more, not with new smartphones spilling from Mother Innovation’s every orifice.
Compared to the competition, the One still fares well. It’s certainly at the top of the Android stable, with only Sony’s Xperia Z and the bargain-basement Nexus 4 (and probably whatever Samsung’s got in store) able to give it any competition. It’s also one of the few devices that can compete with the iPhone on lustworthiness — the rock-solid build and that awesome screen certainly give it a dinner-party-wow-factor in a different league.

Samsung Galaxy S4 vs Sony Xperia Z


High-end flagships with massive displays are fast becoming the norm, but can the Samsung Galaxy S4 outgun Sony's Xperia Z?

Sony Xperia Z: Key specs and features

The Sony Xperia Z may be a flat rectangle, but what a flat rectangle it is. Clad on front and back by extra-tough Dragontrail glass the phone has a premium feel while looking classy with panelled detailing on the sides and snazzy embedded silver buttons. The Xperia Z is also waterproof and has IP57 certification.
Sony Xperia Z
The screen bezel is very narrow and the edges have a chiselled shape. The display itself is a 5-inch LCD with a 1920x1080 pixel Full HD resolution at 443 pixels-per-inch (ppi). This delivers fantastic brightness and pure whites, while Sony’s Mobile Bravia Engine 2 creates punchy colours and OptiContrast technology ensures everything pops.
Watching video on this thing is unreal, it’s rather a lot like glass-less 3D even though there’s not a whiff of 3D tech involved. This is easily one of the best displays around alongside the HTC One.
Power comes from a quad-core Qualcomm Snapdragon S4 processor along with 2GB of RAM and an Adreno 320 GPU. 

While newer chips are starting to take over, this particular model is still a recent one and remains competitive in the current market. It’ll deftly handle Android’s interface and multitasking as well as any apps or games you care to try on the Google Play store.

Samsung Galaxy S4: Key specs and features

The processing power inside Samsung’s Galaxy S4 represents the next wave of mobile hardware as it’s based on ARM’s Cortex-A15 architecture as well as its big.Little technology. It’s the Exynos 5 Octa eight-core chip, which buddies up a 1.6GHz Cortex-A15 quad-core cluster.
Samsung Galaxy S4
This allows the chip to optimise high-end speed against low-end battery efficiency depending on the tasks at hand and should result in quicker performance than its rival as well as longer life on a single charge. Samsung’s setup also sports a PowerVR SGX544MP3 tri-core GPU and 2GB of RAM.
Another key component of prolonging battery life is the new display technology – it’s called Green PHOLED and is up to 33 per cent more efficient than conventional AMOLED at no cost to image quality.
The 5-inch panel has a Full HD 1920x1080 pixel resolution of 441ppi. Visuals are crisp and colourful with great contrast and it’s a neat display for consuming multimedia.
Storage space is reasonably plentiful with options for either 16GB, 32GB or 64GB of onboard capacity plus expandability via microSD cards by up to 64GB.
You’ve also got Android 4.2.2, the most up-to-date Android build available with all of its slick optimisation and reliable performance upgrades.
With a 2,600mAh battery, things will keep going for a long time - well - much longer than on the Sony Xperia Z anyway.

Conclusion

The Xperia Z is a brilliant phone and we’ve rarely encountered a display that’s this rich, however, you pay a price for it and not just in monetary terms.
The battery life is not particularly good and the device only has 16GB of onboard storage. There is the option of expanding this by microSD by up to 32GB, but here the Galaxy S4 has an advantage with 16GB, 32GB or 64GB of internal capacity plus card capability up to 64GB.
The Galaxy S4 still offers a fantastic display which is much kinder to your power consumption, but it backs this up with a faster processor which is also not as hard on the battery.
That said, the Xperia Z certainly beats the Galaxy S4 on visual design and build quality.
So, if battery isn’t important to you and you’re looking for a pretty yet portable media viewer with an insane display, the Xperia Z may be for you. Otherwise, for a well-rounded smartphone, the Galaxy S4 seems like a better choice.

How Samsung's Galaxy S 4 stacks up against iPhone 5


Samsung Electronics Co on Thursday premiered its latest phone, the Galaxy S4, which sports a bigger display and features such as gesture controls, as the South Korean company takes the fight to iPhone maker Apple Inc.
The following is a side-by-side comparison of their physical hardware:
SpecsGalaxy S4iPhone 5
Screen size5in full HD Super AMOLED4in IPS LCD
Resolution1,920 x 1,080 pixels, 441ppi (pixels per inch)1,136 x 640 pixels, 326ppi
Thickness7.9mm7.6mm
Processor1.9GHz quad-core Snapdragon Fusion Pro; or proprietary 1.6GHz octa-core Exynos 5 OctaProprietary A6
Camera (rear/front)13-megapixel/2-megapixel8-megapixel/1.2-megapixel
RAM2GB1GB
Video recording1,080p HD video1,080p HD video/30fps
Weight130g112g
PlatformAndroid (Jelly Bean)iOS6
Capacity16GB, 32GB, 64GB16GB, 32GB, 64GB
Expandable memoryUp to 64GBNo
4G LTEYesYes
NFCYesNo
Battery life2,600mAh8 hrs talk time/Standby 225 hours
Launch datelate AprilSept 2012

After months of rumours and speculations, Samsung has finally unveiled its new flagship smartphone, the Galaxy S 4, to great fanfare in New York City.
iPhone 5
The phone is slimmer yet larger than its predecessor - it has a 5in screen with an incredible full HD (1,920 x 1,080-pixels) display. The Galaxy S III has a 4.8in screen.
For shooting photos and videos, it has a 13-megapixel on the back and for video calls it has a 2-megapixel camera on the front.
Apart from that it will come with a host of features, including Air Gestures which will allows users to browse content, change music and reject or answer calls with just a wave of their hand.
It'll come packed with a number of Samsung apps. The S Health apps, for instance, will help users track their calorie intake and keep count of the number of steps taken.
Samsung has borrowed some features from the Galaxy Note II, namely the function that allows users to preview content by hovering the S Pen over the screen. WIth the S IV you don't need a stylus to do that - users can just use their finger.
Samsung Galaxy S4


Samsung Galaxy S4 : Be Ready 4 the Next Galaxy!

Samsung's Galaxy S4 phone looks a lot like Samsung's old phone.

Side by side, you can barely tell them apart. 

Pick up the Samsung Galaxy S4, however, and there's no mistaking it. 

It's lighter, it's thinner, it has a premium feel and more modern look, a plastic border that seems like metal, and a screen that makes for compelling viewing.

It's this display that makes the biggest impact when you pick up the phone, and not just because of its larger size (5 inches rather than 4.8). 

(scroll down for video )

The Galaxy S4 Super AMOLED screen seems brighter and is clearly a lot sharper. Its full high-definition, 441 pixels-per-inch resolution makes words easier to read, photos more detailed, and gives Apple's 326ppi Retina display true competition.


SAMSUNG GALAXY S4

Samsung Galaxy S4
Samsung Galaxy S4 ... compared to the Samsung Galaxy S3 in New York. 
Samsung seems to have glossed over other hardware enhancements in this phone during its press conference - including an eight-core processor, 2GB RAM, and an infra-red light for use as a TV remote control - but these could make the difference when sizing up a future phone investment. 

Instead the company is focusing on the new software in its new Galaxy. Some fresh features have a lot of potential, while others might seem more like a gimmick than a daily saviour.

One of the most useful and innovative additions is Air Gesture. Certain moves, made in front of the phone's 2-megapixel front-facing camera, let users drive the phone without touching it.


SAMSUNG GALAXY S4

Samsung Galaxy S4
Samsung Galaxy S4 ... compared to the Samsung Galaxy S3 in New York. 
Want to flip from photo to photo without dragging greasy paws across its display? Air Browse let us do that. 

Side-to-side waving gestures in the internet browser let us switch between tabs, while up and down movements moved a website up and down. This works comfortably and reliably in practice.

This waving motion can also be used to accept a phone call, though users should be mindful of gesticulations before applying this feature.


SAMSUNG GALAXY S4

Samsung Galaxy S4
Samsung's new Galaxy S4 is seen during its unveiling on March 14, 2013 at Radio City Music Hall in New York. The slim, feature-rich Galaxy S4 was introduced as Samsung's new champion in the fiercely competitive smartphone arena, scheduled to roll out in 155 countries in late April. 
Eye-tracking technology also receives an outing in this handset in two features: Smart Pause and Smart Scroll. 

Smart Pause seemed the most efficient during our brief tests. Even through spectacles, the phone recognised when we were paying attention and when we were looking at the ceiling, pausing the video until our eyeballs returned. 

Smart Scroll was less of a joy. The phone tracks a person's gaze and, if it's on the screen during a web-browsing session, the user can scroll by tilting the phone up and down. Sadly, this rarely worked as anticipated. Our eyes regularly disappeared from its field of view when tilting the phone up, halting the process.


SAMSUNG GALAXY S4 LAUNCH

Samsung Galaxy S4 launch
JK Shin, President and Head of IT and mobile communication division of Samsung introduces the Samsung Galaxy S4 in New York City. 
The Galaxy S4's new camera also gets much more than a 13-megapixel boost. The image modes from its Galaxy Camera now feature for quick photo enhancements, and some innovative features lie in its menus. 

Taking a photo with the phone's two cameras simultaneously might not be useful every day, but Dual Camera makes for excellent postcard-like travel shots.


SAMSUNG GALAXY S4 LAUNCH

Samsung Galaxy S4 launch
Samsung Galaxy S4 launch in New York City. 
Other enhancements likely to be useful include Eraser, that accurately identified and let us remove photo-bombers from pictures, and Drama Shot that takes many photos and combines some to give the appearance of multiple exposures.


SAMSUNG GALAXY S4

Samsung Galaxy S4
Samsung Galaxy S4 ... camera and photo features.
These are camera enhancements that could be replicated by apps, but they work seamlessly as part of the phone. 

Some other software features seemed of limited use. Group Play worked well in our test, sharing photos to a nearby handset so we could see the same thing, and music could be shared between handsets too. Whether this will become common practice is debatable. 

Ultimately, Samsung has again proven it can innovate and stand out from the Google Android pack with the Galaxy S4. Only those who like its look will reinvest, but that is a large worldwide audience.


Wednesday, February 06, 2013

BlackBerry Z10 Review

The BlackBerry Z10 is everything to BlackBerry - and I don't just mean for the platform or the newly rechristened company that has adopted the brand for which it is most known. The BlackBerry Z10, the first smartphone to run the BlackBerry 10 operating system, is a sink or swim device that will likely determine if the company will manage to hold on to its ever-dwindling market share and right the ship that sent it from first to worst in smartphone relevance.
Blackberry Z10
The days of a BlackBerry being the definitive smartphone are gone. The BlackBerry Z10 debuts at a time when smartphones are as much about play as they are productivity, and this phone can thrive in this era only if it can strike a balance between entertainment and enterprise. Can the BlackBerry Z10 be the savior that BlackBerry - the company and operating system - so desperately needs?

Hardware & Design

The BlackBerry Z10 has what many might consider a generic appearance. There are no eye-popping colors like we've seen with Windows Phone 8 devices, nor any bold curves to elicit the cliché labeling of a phone being "sexy." It's an all-business box, rectangular and overwhelmingly black except for the silver-colored buttons that appear in limited areas. That's not to say that being all business is boring; the Z10 just so happens to have a design that favors minimalism. The 130mm x 65.6mm x 9mm (5.11in x 2.58in x 0.35in) frame is basically the "Little Black Dress" of smartphones.
Z10: a new dimension

A large bezel and lines along the edges make the BlackBerry Z10 subtly catch the eye, but a user's senses will quickly gravitate to touch. Hard plastic is used for the front and sides of the phone, but a lusciously soft rubber-like material is used for the back of the phone. It has dozens of tiny dimples similar to the Google Nexus 7, and it's definitely one of the most comfortable smartphone materials to rest gently in your palm.


The body is otherwise sparse, as BlackBerry has shed the weight of a physical keyboard and trackball that has been so common for the handset maker. The Z10's only distractions from its otherwise understated build are micro USB and microHDMI ports on the left; a power button and 3.5mm headphone jack on the top; and volume buttons, separated by a button that can pause music playback or be held down to prompt voice commands, on the right. The bottom of the phone houses a speaker that plays music at a decent volume, and there's also a red notification light in the top right corner.

Screen

A 4.2-inch screen serves as the face of the BlackBerry Z10. The display looks excellent thanks to strong brightness, which can be adjusted on a sliding scale, and a 1280 x 768 resolution that densely packs pixels into a smaller space. The high resolution is typically seen on phones with larger screen sizes, so the 356ppi display on the Z10 creates a detailed picture that looks wonderful for videos and text. The brightness levels also translate to a legible screen when viewed outdoors.


Performance & Specs

BlackBerry 10 is an operating system built entirely on the concept of fluidity; users move from one app to the other and change course at an instant. Facilitating that persistent state of movement requires a strong set of internal hardware, and the BlackBerry Z10 fits the bill with a 1.5 GHz dual-core processor and 2GB of RAM. The processor keeps the Flow and Peak elements of the BB10 software moving freely, and the phone seems to buzz along with only a few hiccups.

One nagging feature is that when launching an app, the phone first navigates to the Active screen and then launches the app. The act adds only a fraction of a second to the process, but the presentation makes it seem as though the phone is slower than necessary. The same appearance of sluggishness happens when switching between portrait and landscape orientation, which is odd considering that every other aspect of the BlackBerry Z10 navigation appears to be quite fast. BlackBerry 10, at least on the Z10, appears to have excellent memory management and the hardware to effectively run the operating system with practically no drag.

Key BlackBerry Z10 specifications include: 
- 16GB internal storage, microSD slot up to 32GB 
- 4.2-inch IPS display (1280x768 resolution, 356ppi) 
- 1.5GHz dual-core processor 
- Bluetooth 4.0, NFC, Wi-Fi 802.11 a/b/g/n, microHDMI-out 
- 4G LTE and HSPA+ 
- 1,800 mAh battery


Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Galaxy S3 vs Nexus 4 vs iPhone 5


Samsung revealed the Samsung Galaxy S3 in May of last year and the handset quickly became the best-seller of 2012. The Apple iPhone 5 came out in September and then the LG Nexus 4 was revealed in November. All of the handsets are superb but which happens to be the best?
Samsung Galaxy S3 vs LG Nexus 4 vs iPhone 5
Power: When it comes to processors the LG Nexus 4 has the Qualcomm quad core of 1.5GHz, while Apple chose the A6 processor for the Apple iPhone 5, which is 1.2GHz. The Samsung Galaxy S3 comes with the Exynos processor internationally. The Apple iPhone 5 might have the slowest of the three, however it has twice the speed of the Apple iPhone 4S. As the LG Nexus 4 has the four cores and 2GB it has the best of both. If you want four cores on the Samsung Galaxy S3 then you get 1GB of RAM, while with 2GB of RAM you get dual cores (US version). The LG Nexus 4 has to be the winner.
LG Nexus 4
OS: In terms of the operating system the LG Nexus 4 has Jelly Bean 4.2, while the Samsung Galaxy S3 has 4.1 and of course the Apple iPhone 5 has iOS. This is the most streamlined of the operating systems, but if you need customisation then you would have to choose Android. The Samsung Galaxy S3 and the LG Nexus 4 have Android, but it is the LG Nexus 4 that generally gets updates the fastest as it has the Nexus name. The OS is just personal choice and so this means that it has to be a draw for the LG Nexus and Apple iPhone 5.
Storage: The LG Nexus 4 comes in choices of 8GB or 16GB; however it lacks SD card support. The Samsung Galaxy S3 is in 16GB or 32GB and this can be expanded to 64GB. The Apple iPhone 5 is offered in 16GB, 32GB or 64GB but lacks SD card expansion. This means that the Samsung Galaxy S3 is the winner.
Samsung Galaxy S3
Display: In regards to displays the LG Nexus 4 has 4.7 inches of True HD IPS with 318ppi and resolution of 1280 x 768. The Samsung Galaxy S3 comes in at 4.8 inches and has 306ppi and resolution of 1280 x 720. The Apple iPhone 5 has the 4 inch display, which is the smallest, and 206ppi with 1136 x 640 resolution. While all of the screens are great and this will be a personal choice, the IPS displays do offer more realistic colours and the Super AMOLED is generally hyper real and over saturated. On the plus side the blacks tend to be deep and colours are vibrant. As the LG Nexus has the biggest IPS display it stands out as the winner.
Battery life: You may get around 15 of talk time from the LG Nexus 4 thanks to the battery of 2100mAh. The Samsung Galaxy S3 and the Apple iPhone 5 both offer around 8 hours. In recent tests AnandTech said that the Apple iPhone 5 came first and this was followed by the Samsung Galaxy S3, with the LG Nexus 4 just behind, which puts the Apple iPhone 5 ahead.
Design: The LG Nexus 4 comes in at 129 grams with measurements of 133.9mmx68.7mmx9.1mm, the Samsung Galaxy S3 is 136.6×70.6mmx8.6mm and weighs 133 grams and the Apple iPhone 5 is 123.8mmx58.6×7.6mm, with a weight of just 112 grams. If you want a handset with superb looks then it has to be the Apple iPhone 5, with the LG Nexus 4 following on close behind and the Samsung Galaxy S3 in last place. The device does happen to be the smallest and it is the lightest and so the Apple iPhone 5 is the winner here.
Apple iPhone 5
Connectivity: The Samsung Galaxy S3 and the LG Nexus 4 both come with NFC, while it is the Samsung Galaxy S3 and the Apple iPhone 5 that support LTE. If you have a need for both then you would have to go for the Samsung Galaxy S3.
Camera: The LG Nexus 4 has a camera of 8 megapixels and this has support for 1080p video, LED flash and autofocus, there is also a camera of 1.3 on the front. The Samsung Galaxy S3 along with the Apple iPhone 5 both have a camera of 8 megapixels, which support LED flash and autofocus. The Samsung Galaxy S3 also has a camera of 1.9 and the Apple iPhone 5 a 1.9 on the front. The camera of the Apple iPhone 5 is best in low light and all of the cameras come with points that are good and bad. The LG Nexus features Photo Sphere, while the Apple iPhone 5 has a camera that is excellent in low light conditions and it has the better BSI sensor. The Samsung Galaxy S3 is known for taking video and still together.
Bottom line: If you want a device that is easy to handle and which looks great then you may go for the Apple iPhone 5. If you want a device that is cheap then you could take a look at the LG Nexus 4. The downside is that there are things missing on it, but you do get quite a lot for your money. If you want a handset that is all-round good then you could go for the Samsung Galaxy S3 which has a fair price tag as well. So if you are looking for a handset that covers all the bases without breaking the bank, it has to be the Samsung Galaxy S3.
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