Suspicious-Teach8788
Lifer
- Feb 19, 2001
- 20,155
- 23
- 81
Nice ping and download speed. I'm almost jealous. But then I remember how often I got EDGE with Tmobile and no signal in my basement.
sigh... when will AT&T enable DC-HSPA???
So he's impressed with the CRT off animation which has been included feature since Nexus S 2.3 Gingerbread. Great. Next he'll discover Face Unlock.
was that only on the Nexus S? What other phones? Did the GNex have it?So he's impressed with the CRT off animation which has been included feature since Nexus S 2.3 Gingerbread. Great. Next he'll discover Face Unlock.
was that only on the Nexus S? What other phones? Did the GNex have it?
I know of the CRT animation because they put that in CyanogenMod and kept it in, but I don't see other phones with it. This is a clear case of fragmentation if so because they put it in Gingerbread on the Nexus S and then it disappeared?
They say they have, but I've never heard of anyone seeing it in the wild. They're full steam ahead on lte now so I wouldn't expect them to ever do it. It's literally a configuration/software change, or so I've heard...
its kinda a ??? because AT&T's idea of going HSPA first and then LTE later was to show that they have a strong backbone. If LTE connectivity suffers in an area, you can fall back to HSPA, etc. Strange they didn't beef their HSPA network up by enabling dual carrier. I'd imagine it's a pretty easy change. Plus, it'd help mitigate 3G traffic issues.AT&T has never enabled DC-HSPA+ and is one of the few GSM carriers in the world no to do so. They went straight to LTE.
its kinda a ??? because AT&T's idea of going HSPA first and then LTE later was to show that they have a strong backbone. If LTE connectivity suffers in an area, you can fall back to HSPA, etc. Strange they didn't beef their HSPA network up by enabling dual carrier. I'd imagine it's a pretty easy change. Plus, it'd help mitigate 3G traffic issues.
ill start venting about it soon because of the lack of LTE on the Nexus 4It's easy to enable, they just aren't doing so. Go read some of Brian Klug's tweets (@nerdtalker), he'll vent about it every couple of days.
ill start venting about it soon because of the lack of LTE on the Nexus 4![]()
I fix it got a picture of the mobo of the N4 and it shows that it contains the LTE chipset. So maybe someone can hack it to work, or maybe down the line google might enable it.
The N4 seems quite a bit cheaper than the equivalent competition, am I missing something or is this a really good deal?
N4 16gig £279
HTC one X £369
Samsung S3 £369
Benchmarks give the impression that there would be very little real world difference in the performance, and hardware specs (screen size/resolution/quality, camera quality, connectivity options) are close. So why the £100 difference.
It's a really good deal. Completely eliminates the One X from relevance (remember, the Nexus is considerably *faster*) and wins easily over the S3 if you don't need more storage, LTE (which is in its overpriced infancy in the UK), or the ability to battery swap.The N4 seems quite a bit cheaper than the equivalent competition, am I missing something or is this a really good deal?
In the US most people buy phones on a 2 year contract. So a $600 phone only costs $200 to $300 with a contract. Google is selling this phone without carrier interference and the need of a contract. And they need to keep the price low enough that it can compete with the $200 and $300 contract phones. So they are selling it at $350 (16GB) without a contract and probably little to no profit for Google themselves.
I heard LG is controlling the pricing outside the Google Play store and it's higher elsewhere. But looks like it's still cheaper the the competition where you are at.
Long story short, yes it really is a really good deal.
The N4 seems quite a bit cheaper than the equivalent competition, am I missing something or is this a really good deal?
N4 16gig £279
HTC one X £369
Samsung S3 £369
Benchmarks give the impression that there would be very little real world difference in the performance, and hardware specs (screen size/resolution/quality, camera quality, connectivity options) are close. So why the £100 difference.
Ah yes, I remember from my visits to the USA that it was near impossible to find a cheap data SIM only deal while there. In the end it was cheaper for me to pay the roaming charges using my UK SIM.
Think the N4 will be a great deal if I can get my hands on one in the next few weeks, "3" and "GiffGaff" are both doing some great 12 month SIM only deals in the UK at the moment so I could be in for a cheap year of mobile use for a change![]()
US cheap data sim - T-mobile 5gb prepaid (with 100 minutes) - $30 per month prepaid - Works great with the Nexus phones (Galaxy Nexus or Nexus 4) as they are pentaband
Ah yes, I remember from my visits to the USA that it was near impossible to find a cheap data SIM only deal while there. In the end it was cheaper for me to pay the roaming charges using my UK SIM.
Think the N4 will be a great deal if I can get my hands on one in the next few weeks, "3" and "GiffGaff" are both doing some great 12 month SIM only deals in the UK at the moment so I could be in for a cheap year of mobile use for a change![]()
Nexus 4 drop test.
Drop from waist level, and everything is intact: http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=nlgG33n71m0#t=29s
Drop from > 6 feet up, and back glass is cracked: www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=nlgG33n71m0#t=110s