Nexus One Review – TechGiraffe Verdict

2 Feb
2010

The Google’s own Nexus One was one of the most anticipated devices along with Apple iPad this year. We finally got time to review the so called “superphone” as mentioned by the Google Employees. After using it for several days, I was about as disappointed as I was after using Nokia E72. I am not trying to tell you that Nexus One is bad. It was the prelaunch hype which set huge expectations – Alias’s like the iPhoneKiller – which it failed to match. Is Nexus One a cool phone? It definitely is a cool phone. Is it an iPhone killer? I don’t think so.

This phone is Google only by name; it’s really an HTC phone at heart. The phone looks great and feels great as well. The body is made out of a metal frame that wraps around the plastic back-cover. It’s soft but offers adequate grip so that you don’t drop your 530$ toy. The Nexus One actually fits quiet properly in your hand even if it is a little big but what’s more interesting is its thickness that hits 11.5mm, which is incredibly good when you consider all the powerful hardware that is packed inside.

On top you’ve got your 3.5mm headphone jack, and the power button. On the bottom side you have a USB port and on the right you have a volume rocker. On the front panel the 3.7” AMOLED screen sits comfortably, you have 4 haptic feedback buttons under the screen – back, menu, home and search. You also have a trackball but I don’t know why they put that really, you’re not going to use it anywhere but it acts as a notification light for missed calls and new messages…etc.

The screen is AMOLED, as previously mentioned, and is quiet large. But just like all AMOLED screens, it has disgraceful sunlight discernibility. Although this thing is a superstar indoors, it represents a fat hooker outdoors.

The back side of the phone looks great. You have a huge Google logo just to make sure you know you’ve bought their phone. The curvy design of the metal bezel with the plastic back-cover looks great. You have two important features on the back, the camera and the loudspeaker. Both are pretty good and do their job. The snapper has a 5 megapixel resolution and an LED flash next to it for low light situations. The pictures produces are actually quite good, I have no complaints, since I expected much less from this HTC snapper.

The Nexus One has a modest specs sheet if you overlook the Snapdragon processor, which is one of the strongest cell phone processors out there. Other than the processor the phone doesn’t blow you away with anything else. It has 512mb of RAM which is on par with other competitive smartphones. You get a 4 GB microSD card, which is less than I expected. Still, it’s expandable up to 32 GB, so there you go.

The battery is a Li-Ion 1400 mAh and offers on par performance at best. You’ll find yourself recharging this thing almost every day if you use it frequently.

One last thing about its hardware I have to mention is its microphone, or microphones in this case. The device has two microphones, one for noise cancellation and the other for your own voice. This offers very clear sound for the other caller, so you don’t need to shout when you’re at a train station for example. It’s a nice addition that I quiet liked.

1 Response to Nexus One Review – TechGiraffe Verdict

Avatar

Sunil Pakawala

February 2nd, 2010 at 5:30 pm

You wait and watch the china phone will be better then the Google Nexus….. I think they will name it Coogle Sexus Ha ha haaa……..!

Comment Form

top