iPhone 5s same screen size?

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Red Storm

Lifer
Oct 2, 2005
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I use one hand. That's kind of the whole reason smartphones are portrait-oriented by default.

They're portrait oriented because they started as phones, and guess which orientation works best for phones? :p

I find it more comfortable to use two hands, and it doesn't matter what device I'm using. I browse on my Note 2 the same way I do on my wife's iPhone 5.
 

MrX8503

Diamond Member
Oct 23, 2005
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I'm just wondering why that's humorous that's all.

I can navigate just with my thumb fine, I just prefer to use both hands and have even with smaller phones than iPhones.

One thumb? You must be Lebron James. Lol.

When I said humorous, I was referring to the fact that you're forced to have a second hand free while using the Note. I've seen people having to let go of a bar while standing on the train to use their phone. The humorous part comes when the train stops. Lol
The fact is most people use 2 hands on any given gadget. Even the iphone.

Is that a fact?
 

Rakehellion

Lifer
Jan 15, 2013
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I always laugh when i see people whip out their Apple iPhone 5, which literally looks like a matchbook

I guess when you get to be that age, you eyesight isn't what it used to be.

I don't see the point of a five-inch phone except to watch movies, which I don't plan to do on a park bench or on the subway as it is.
 

Red Storm

Lifer
Oct 2, 2005
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234
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What's funny is that on the iPhone 5, while using it one handed the experience slows to a crawl anytime the keyboard pops up, whereas on my Note 2 or any other Android phone I can continue speeding along thanks to one handed gesture typing. Apple seriously needs to license the technology.
 

Rakehellion

Lifer
Jan 15, 2013
12,181
35
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They're portrait oriented because they started as phones, and guess which orientation works best for phones? :p

I find it more comfortable to use two hands, and it doesn't matter what device I'm using. I browse on my Note 2 the same way I do on my wife's iPhone 5.

And they're still phones. I don't see any that are in landscape mode by default or with hardware buttons rotated at a 90 degree angle.

It's much more convenient to use a phone one-handed. Maybe you're just clumsy.
 

Rakehellion

Lifer
Jan 15, 2013
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Autocomplete and fancy keyboards are just an example of technology getting in the way. I prefer to know what I'm typing.
 

Ashenor

Golden Member
May 9, 2012
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I guess when you get to be that age, you eyesight isn't what it used to be.

I don't see the point of a five-inch phone except to watch movies, which I don't plan to do on a park bench or on the subway as it is.

Simmer down guy, it was a parody of his post.

And like i said i have owned both.
 

s44

Diamond Member
Oct 13, 2006
9,427
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Android devices were low res for a while during the iPhone 4's release. Now high res is all the craze.
Nice revisionism.

Actually, Apple was still stuck on 480*320 when the OG Droid raised the stakes to 854*480. They finally caught up eight months later with the 4. Then they stood pat until 720p becaume Android standard *in 2011*. They still haven't caught up, and sub-720p now that the flagship standard is 1080p is a big gap.
 

Red Storm

Lifer
Oct 2, 2005
14,233
234
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And they're still phones. I don't see any that are in landscape mode by default or with hardware buttons rotated at a 90 degree angle.

It's much more convenient to use a phone one-handed. Maybe you're just clumsy.

Yes, that must be it. :rolleyes:

Phones are just one of the many, many things they are now. I do hold it one-handed when making phone calls, as I'm sure everyone does.

I can browse one handed, but I find the two hand approach more comfortable and relaxing, and it doesn't matter if it's an iPhone or a Note.
 

MrX8503

Diamond Member
Oct 23, 2005
4,529
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Nice revisionism.

Actually, Apple was still stuck on 480*320 when the OG Droid raised the stakes to 854*480. They finally caught up eight months later with the 4. Then they stood pat until 720p becaume Android standard *in 2011*. They still haven't caught up, and sub-720p now that the flagship standard is 1080p is a big gap.

The OG Droid's screen wasn't all that sharp.
 

Accord99

Platinum Member
Jul 2, 2001
2,259
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The OG Droid's screen wasn't all that sharp.
Isn't it relative? The Android phones with WVGA/FWVGA screens were more sharper than the Iphone 2G/3G/3GS screen than the iPhone 4 screen was sharper than the WVGA/FWVGA screen. WVGA increased pixel count by 2.5x from HVGA, while iPhone 4's DVGA only increased pixel count by 1.6x from WVGA.

Many manufacturers were already pushing phone resolutions, not just Apple.
 

Mopetar

Diamond Member
Jan 31, 2011
8,491
7,750
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The OG Droid's screen wasn't all that sharp.

It was ~260 ppi, which was incredibly good for the time. There weren't many other devices that pushed beyond significantly beyond that resolution for quite some time, and there were a lot of flagship phones from other manufacturers (such as the Evo and Galaxy SII) that had much lower ppi's.

If anything, the biggest problem with the display was that the touch sensor wasn't very good and prone to some inaccuracy. Here's an old video showing a test of phone touch screen accuracy. The Droid performs worse than every other phone tested.
 

thecapsaicinkid

Senior member
Nov 30, 2012
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Soft or hard, both are fine, but look at how the N4 does it. Not only do you have soft buttons taking away screen real estate, you have a giant bottom bezel. At least Samsung uses the bezel for hardware buttons.
The bezel on the N4 is smaller than the iPhone 5.
 

MrX8503

Diamond Member
Oct 23, 2005
4,529
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But it was still retina dpi.

You could see the pixels on the Droid

It was ~260 ppi, which was incredibly good for the time. There weren't many other devices that pushed beyond significantly beyond that resolution for quite some time, and there were a lot of flagship phones from other manufacturers (such as the Evo and Galaxy SII) that had much lower ppi's.

If anything, the biggest problem with the display was that the touch sensor wasn't very good and prone to some inaccuracy. Here's an old video showing a test of phone touch screen accuracy. The Droid performs worse than every other phone tested.

The iPhone 4 came out around the EVO and SGS2.
 

lokiju

Lifer
May 29, 2003
18,526
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After being long time iPhone user and proponent, I gave in this week and pre-ordered the Galaxy S4 to replace our (wife and I) iPhone 4s's.

Will have it by the end of next week and hopefully I don't regret the decision.

I owned a iPhone 3 day one but it was so dog shit slow that I switch to a Droid 1 when it came out and that was my 1st long term experience with Android. I had that Droid 1 for nearly 2 years then went back to a iPhone 4 then to the 4s I have now.

I just cannot justify the small screen and lack of advances on the iPhones anymore. The 5 was a baby step in the right direction but still to small of a screen for what I wanted.

Hopefully I enjoy the Android OS now that it's had a few years to mature since I last used it daily and I'm sure I'll love the S4 hardware/screen wise way more than the iPhone.

Of course this will be the year Apple pulls off a total surprise and releases a iPhone with a 5" Retina OLED screen or something.... :)
 
Feb 19, 2001
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The bezel on the N4 is smaller than the iPhone 5.

I'm talking about soft and hard buttons, but you bring up the iPhone 5 why? Bezel seems to matter more as the phone gets too large. 4.7" is fine with a smaller bezel.

One thumb? You must be Lebron James. Lol.

When I said humorous, I was referring to the fact that you're forced to have a second hand free while using the Note. I've seen people having to let go of a bar while standing on the train to use their phone. The humorous part comes when the train stops. Lol

So true. I see plenty of people with Notes in Taiwan and Hong Kong. I think it has to do with writing Chinese. Far easier with a large screen. But EVERYONE is on their phones in the subway, and you know there's never enough seats in Asia... heh. I've seen that happen quite a bit.