And go on XDA you'll see I'm not alone in people who have to charge their Nexus 4 before a days up. I guess you weren't a power user *shrug*
Some users just spend 24/7 on wifi or whatever. That's fine and all, but that doesn't make the phone more battery friendly. I carry an iPhone 5 and a Nexus 4 and I swear it just doesn't do well. If you look at GSM Arena's endurance test, the Nexus 4 sucks in battery life. Hell my SGS2 does better.
With purely anecdotal evidence, I've always gotten through a day's worth of use whether it's my Droid 1 or Nexus S, SGS2, or Nexus 4. However, while battery capacity has shot up I honestly have NOT seen any improvements in runtime for battery life. Comparing heads up with my SGS3 friends, my Nexus 4 just doesn't last as long even if I barely turn it on. I get ~5%/hour drain normally and I end the day with maybe 1 hr SOT only. Google Latitude and Now drain quite a bit, and as Brian Klug suggested, it may be that the lack of network batching is really hurting AOSP.
The fact is, iOS and its efficient OS doesn't require a giant battery. It's all in optimization. You can already see Samsung and HTC doing that with their phones.
It's the same -- specs from a year back. It's just that a year back from now we definitely hit a good enough zone.
Yeah, Snapdragon 400 is a rebadged dual-Krait S4plus.
Yeah, that's fine though isn't that? It's plenty fast. Sure I'd love a flagship 4.3" too but this 4.3" isn't shabby at all. At least it's not some craptastic dual A9. What I'm saying is this midrange is far better than the GS3 Mini that was marketed at midrange last year. I don't see people dumping their GS3s calling them crap because the dual Krait can't handle things....