Google Nexus One review:
The Nexus One is not a revolutionary device, but it is the first handset that will offer a meaningful challenge to Apple’s iPhone.
While Google’s
software, called Android, has powered other phones, this is the first one
where the search giant has specified the design – that focus means the
pencil-thin Nexus One is built to feel like a genuine object of desire.
And the Nexus One offers features the iPhone lacks, too – the camera’s resolution
is 5mp, compared to Apple’s 3mp, there are satnav capabilities built
in that cost Apple users extra, and a fast processor means the Nexus One
operates quicker than any phone currently on sale in the UK. Web-browsing is
impressive, although in the UK is likely to lack the multitouch capabilities
that have been available on previous versions of Android. Automatic online
synchronization of camera photos is also impressive. It’s effective voice
operation, for controlling the phone and writing emails, however, that is
the most surprising feature. This is the first time I’ve seen a version of
that technology that is genuinely useable.
In the burgeoning market for additional applications (Apps), however, Apple’s
iTunes Store offers 115,000 compared to the 20,000 or so in Google’s Android
Marketplace. That means that there are currently far more games, tools and
clever tricks available to iPhone owners. As more phones start to adopt
Google’s operating system, however, Android is likely to catch up
fast. And while Android can run a number of Apps at once, the iPhone can’t.
Does the Nexus One feel quite as well put together as the iPhone? No, although
it’s close enough to make no meaningful difference. What Android
handsets can’t do, however, is plug in to your music collection as
seamlessly as an iPod or an iMac. And that’s the biggest problem
Google faces – an iPhone is a web-browsing, every song in your pocket,
phone call making pleasure to own. It’s part of an entire ecosystem,
with accessories, covers, speaker systems and even ties that are built to
house iPods.
But the Nexus One does plug in effortlessly to the web, social media, email,
calendar, search and contacts functions; perhaps the company that dominates
web search should simply start making the computers as well.
telegraph.co.uk
telegraph.co.uk
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