First impressions: Samsung Galaxy Nexus with Android 4.0

First impressions: Samsung Galaxy Nexus with Android 4.0

The Galaxy Nexus is the most iPhone-like Android phone to date and Ice Cream Sandwich is the most iOS-like iteration of Android. Read on for our hands-on verdict.

Want the first look at Samsung’s made-for-Google Galaxy Nexus with Ice Cream Sandwich? Here are our first impressions... 

Galaxy Nexus screen resolution

Even at arm’s length the Galaxy Nexus’s Retina Display-baiting 320dpi resolution screen cuts a sharp picture. It's better than the screen on Apple’s iPhone 4 and iPhone 4S (read our Apple iPhone 4S review). Although (marginally) less hi-res (the iPhones cram 326 pixels into every inch), Apple’s stubborn refusal to move away from a 3.5in screen means the Nexus’s display trumps the iPhone’s.

Galaxy Nexus size

Samsung has resisted the urge to supersize its new made-for-Google handset (we’re looking at you, HTC Titan), so the Galaxy Nexus measures up at a handsome – but not overbearing – 4.65in diagonal. Fans of the Nexus S will be pleased to hear that the Galaxy Nexus has carried over the CRT TV power-off animation when the screen powers down. And it’s still lovely.

Galaxy Nexus Face Unlock

samsung galaxy nexus with android 4.0

There’s a side-mounted button to get the Galaxy Nexus to wake up, but you’ll really want to take advantage of Ice Cream Sandwich’s new Face Unlock feature which recognises your mug and almost instantly springs into action in approval. 

Ice Cream Sandwich (Android 4.0) and the Galaxy Nexus

As you’re probably aware by now Android 4.0 (or Ice Cream Sandwich, to use Google’s sweet-toothed sobriquet) lets you customise your multiple home screens and stack icons into groups (not unlike folders in iOS in look or feel).

There’s also People; an intelligent Rolodex of your friends that latches on to every conceivable avenue of communication (Facebook, Twitter, Google Chat, Google Plus, etc). It all works smartly and gorgeously, and is prettier even than Windows Phone Mango’s similar service. 

Ice Cream Sandwich – buttons begone

samsung galaxy nexus with android 4.0

The physical (or touch) buttons that have come to define Android handsets are gone. The new virtual buttonry is reduced to mere dots when running full-screen apps and is as beautifully unintrusive as we imagine its creators intended. (Fear not, Gingerbread upgraders: Android 4.0 will still support physical/touch buttons, too.) 

Galaxy Nexus – Anroid Beam

samsung galaxy nexus with android 4.0

What’ll change the world more, Apple’s Siri voice assistant or Google’s Android Beam? Certainly our first impressions suggest that Siri needs quite a bit of work to make it beyond its mildly-diverting-and-occassionally-useful-gimmick beta. But Android Beam is also hobbled: Google’s NFC-enabled sharing platform won’t mature until all your mates have NFC phones.

At least Beam is open-source, but we haven’t seen the explosion of NFC-based fun we were promised when the Nexus S came along, and there’s little reason to believe we’ll all be tapping each other’s phones to swap contacts and pictures before the next Nexus iteration arrives. Of course, once tap-to-pay makes NFC indispensible, we’ll eat those words, but whether that will even become mainstream by the end of 2013 (the expected launch window of Google’s sixth phone) remains doubtful.

Galaxy Nexus converts speech to text

samsung galaxy nexus with android 4.0

Google’s real answer to Siri is realtime speech-to-text, which lets you ‘write’ messages with your vocal cords in an evolution of Google’s Voice Search functionality. Despite this not being a final build it appears to work well (but then so did Siri in a quiet room). And speech-to-text also relies on servers to work. If you do resort to the keyboard there’s now super subtle haptic feedback with a 2ms vibration that is just noticeable but hugely satisfying.

Galaxy Nexus camera

samsung galaxy nexus with android 4.0

If the iPhone 4S had arrived with a 5MP camera, there’d have been a riot. So Google’s defensive stance on the Galaxy Nexus’s 5MP sensor is not without cause. It claims faster speeds than the iPhone 4S’s cam, a panoramic mode, face detection and one-touch sharing (that’s open to developers). Snaps are clear and crisp with tonnes of after-edit options like red eye removal, cropping and filters, and you can tag people and places easily. There’s also 1080p video and you can grab a full res photo while filming just by tapping the screen. Even so, 8MP would’ve been nice.

Galaxy Nexus and Ice Cream Sandwich verdict

Is it our imagination? No – the Galaxy Nexus is the most iPhone-like Android phone to date and Ice Cream Sandwich is the most iOS-like iteration of Android.The lack of buttons, the endless list of pilfered UI elements, visual voicemail… the whole shebang.

Of course, it’s a circular argument (iOS has robbed more than its fair share of Android innovations), but the message here is that Google’s Nexus does not want to be number two. And if developers are smart about applying Android 4.0’s hoard of open-source treats to their apps, there’s no reason it should be. As things stand, the iPhone only retains the smartphone crown with its industry-leading build and unrivalled App Store. The rest is yet to be written, but we’ll be back with a full review soon.

Source: Copyright © Stuff.tv

See more about:  phones  |  samsung  |  galaxy  |  nexus
 
 

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Comments: 9
photohounds
26 October 2011
Since they've been copying each other one can expect a convergence, like cars.
This seems to forge ahead in quite a few useful ways.

Of course there's that reportedly GORGEOUS screen - this sets it apart from the old timers ...
To say it is iphone like is curious.
The old school now, is to have a physical start button - like old Androids and Windows 95

I used OS/2 and one could drive it entirely by voice IN A QUIET ROOM - year? 1996
Navigate to an app, open a new email, dictate and send it - all without touching the KB or mouse.
Processing power means that noise resistance is better now, but light years behind most people's brains.
I use Android voice dictate and search sometimes - great but Swype is usually so much faster in a crowd.

The BS marketing (al`a Star Trek), conveniently forgets that only the captain talks in a room full of people.
That the rest conveniently shut up - ever tired to get just the kids to shut up?

Text to speech is OK though as it is unaffected by environment, Androids can already do this.
5MP out-resolves phone camera lenses (in fact it out resolves many of the cheaper DSLR lenses).

More pixels REALLY represent marketing, bragging rights, large image files slower up/downloads so no issue there.
Of course theer's a silly 16MP Android coming out they say. At least you'll be able to set it to 5 or 8. (I hope)


This new device seems to offer several advances users seem to want.
Quality, large screens open smartphone use to many older users
You don't have to don the reading glasses to peer at messages or read just five big words at a time.
Simpler UI
Useful voice functions
Still fits the pocket/handbag
Faster processors for a nippy machine.

Pity they couldn't resist a few of their own gimmicks.


Perhaps for the teens a 3.5 inch mini version should also be contemplated - along the lines of the "little SONY".

As for tapping phones together - anyone tried BUMP on Android to share apps? It works well enough.




Comment made about the PC & Tech Authority article:
First look: Samsung Galaxy Nexus with Android 4.0 review?
The Galaxy Nexus is the most iPhone-like Android phone to date and Ice Cream Sandwich is the most iOS-like iteration of Android. Read on for our hands-on verdict.

What do you think? Join the discussion.
amcmo
26 October 2011
Ah someone else who recognised the worth of OS/2?

Actually the one hands-on I've seen complained about the screen. The tech they use is inferior to the Galaxy2S and doesn't give as vibrant a display.

'Larger screen opens up smartphone user to many older users' - AGEIST! I am happy to use glasses to read the display of my phone. I happen to think it makes this 'older' user look sexier and even slightly wise!:lol:
photohounds
26 October 2011

Hi there AM ...

OS/2 had it all - except honest, decent, quality-motivated demonstrators to corporate entities (and good marketing). Instead it got Steve Ballmer.
It is VERY well documented how he sabotaged the OS/2 demos (mentoring and using "Crash the OS apps") to make that other OS look more stable.
It would be a hoot if millions of computer users didn't suffer a decade's setback to windog as a result.

Wouldn't mind a copy or WARP Server to paly with. Anyone want to PM me about one?

Ruby liked it OS/2 as well ... funny eh, with all the differences ...

My 4+6 kids said I looked "intelligent" when I got my first pair of readers. Flatterers ...

Wait for the prod screen in the Sammy version - it will propbably be the duck's nuts, and there's time for the Christmas rush ...

Having said that the S2 has a superb screen - my battery-saving workmate flashes it in my direction every now and then, allegedly to show me some new, ripper Android app.
Bastard :)

My 'S' does it all reasonably well including voice. Amazing how long the battery lasts when you stop fiddling because you have founs most of what it can do ... still the occasional (pleasant) surprise ...

marts
26 October 2011
I would imagine that it'd be difficult for Apple to move away from a 3.5" screen. This would considerably alter the iPhone's form factor. Anything larger would be locked out of the vast accessory market such as stereo systems, alarm clocks, in car docking stations and so on that all work around the existing 3.5" screen based phone.

Of course, on the flip side, a larger iPhone would spur on a whole new range of products for manufacturers to capitalise on.
amcmo
26 October 2011
This mag (well actually the one that reviewed it) , typical 'Apple's stubborn refusal to move from 3.5", many people prefer the 3.5", and it still has the highest resolution.

Showing how superficial the reivews in this mag are, they point out that the resolution is only slightly less than that of the iPhone, however totally omit mention of the fact that it uses an inferior technology that makes the display actually worse than the lower resolution Galaxy2S. The PenTile display has fewer sub pixels and larger pixels meaning for any given resolution the display needs to be bigger than a normal AMOLED or LCD display.

There have been more than a few complaints about the Droid 3 which also uses a PenTile display. Whether an issue with the tech or Motorola's implementation remains to be seen.

If you're after a big display Android phone, I'd wait for Samsung's next, or get a Galaxy2S if you don't want to wait.
photohounds
26 October 2011
A valid point marts, though I realy couldn't imagine the Big A caring much about the hangers-on making money off their phones/pods hving to produce adapters, different models etc...
Only if said add-on makers paid the BigA to have the ipod sticker on the box would BigA care.

Caveat venditor ...
Haratu
26 October 2011
It seems the Nexus is just a release platform for the next Android. My guess is that they will have a better phone out within six months to use the features better and more efficiently.
amcmo
27 October 2011
I'd say the next Samsung, in shorter time than that will have all the new features and the better screen.

Remains to be seen if they can avoid sucking themselves into a schoolboy 'mine's bigger than your's' w..k session on the screen size.

Anywhere from 3.5 to 4.5 seems to work just fine, though our accountant has handed his G2S down to his wife and ordered a 4S.

His view (same one I came to when trying them side by side), the iPhone fits a pocket better, the G2S is just fine in a handbag.
Al H.
2 November 2011
Reception, lol? We forget that these are a phone first. Living in a regional area, this is the first criteria for me.
Each phone accurately rated out of 100 would be nice.
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