Posts tagged nexus one
iPad Weekend: How Do You Surf, and Has It Changed?
Apr 4th
The iPad is out, and women everywhere are jumping for joy because now they finally have a computer that can double as a sanitary napkin.
The iPad was released yesterday, and octogenarians are trying to jump for joy because there is finally a computer they can use without hounding their grandchildren.
The iPad is here, and now Jesus can rest in peace.
Yes, this weekend, and likely the rest of April, will be dominated with talk of the iPad, its apps, its games, its strengths, weaknesses, pundits and detractors. There is a whole cottage industry based around Apple releases, and according to the numbers, this was no small release. Upwards of 700,000 purchased in the first day, lines around the block, people smashing each other’s faces in to be the first to smash someone’s face in with an iPad.
I don’t believe people will replace their laptops with iPads. Rather, I think that the iPad will become the newspaper you take into the bathroom with you. It will be, with your cell phone, the first thing you touch after getting out of bed, and likely the last thing before going to sleep. It will be a permanent fixture in most living rooms, and even some kitchens, and it will operate to change the way people surf the web.
Which got me wondering: how do you surf the web? Ever since I got my Nexus One, browsing the internet on a Smartphone is actually possible (this coming from the stunted methods used in the Blackberry OS). Pages render smoothly and, for the most part, intelligently, adjusting to the smaller screen size. Text is clear and readable, and scrolling with your finger is easy and natural.
The web was never meant to be navigated with a finger. Links are generally text-based, and therefore hard to touch sometimes without zooming in; the finger isn’t as adept at manipulating text as a mouse. In spite of this, touch-based web has exploded since the iPhone. There is not a major website without a mobile version or one modified for touch.
Similarly, the iPad has already dictated, through its lack of Flash, how many media-based websites must exist in the Apple ecosystem. The company has forced major news and media companies to monitor what device one is using to browse its site, and to format it accordingly. Many companies have iPhone-, and now iPad-ready experiences. They have jettisoned their flash-based media with HTML5. This undermines the concept of an open web. Though the content is the same, one does not know that, on a non-Apple device, if he or she is getting the whole experience. Development for the iPhone and iPad are going to take a lot of time away from other mediums, other worthwhile projects. It’s sad to see, since the open web exists outside the Apple ecosystem.
The fact that Android devices will, in the near future, receive relatively complete Flash support, with Flash 10.1, and will be able to interact with non-Applefied sites, will hopefully bring developers back to reality a bit, and to halt their rapid eschewing of the Flash platform, which, for the most part, is an aide to the web. Yes, there are security concerns but as long as one is careful where he goes, and does not use the web for, ahem, nefarious purposes, Flash is harmless. What isn’t harmless is the ability for the Great Steve Jobs to essentially dictate, but not supporting a certain platform or plugin, what tools web designers can and can’t use to enhance their site. While Flash is the first, it may not be the last time that Apple decides they do not like a product or platform enough to support it.
But this is getting long-winded. I want to know: how do you surf?
Since getting my Nexus One, I spend a lot less time surfing the web on my laptop, in spite of it having much more screen space, and all the plugins that are supposed to enhance the surfing experience. I believe I default to the Nexus One because, at its core, my surfing desires are simple: to find good content and consume. I don’t need fifteen tabs open at the same time; I don’t need Flash. Mostly, I just need a couple bookmarks, a decent rendering engine, and a couch, and I am off to a good start. Browsing the web with your fingers feels natural. There isn’t the halting stop/start of a mouse (or thankfully, the track pad, which on my Dell laptop, SUCKS). There is just me and the screen.
So I may buy an iPad. I will probably use it haltingly, the same way I use my iPod Touch. To surf the web on the couch or in the bathroom. But without true multitasking support it’s going to be either a newspaper, or a book, or a browser, or a game system. But it will likely never be all these things to me. The great thing about having a laptop is that, when you need to, you can do more than one thing at a time. I think as consumers of media we are impatient, and this impatience will likely prevent the iPad from being adopted absolutely as a laptop replacement.
Comments? Suggestions? Let me know in the comments.
Google Does a Little Teasing With The CDMA Nexus One
Mar 27th

So far the only Nexus One love going around has been to GSM users. T-Mobile US customers had first cracks at it, then more recently AT&T/Rogers was given their turn, followed by rumors of some Sprint love on the horizon. But the big question has always been when is the nation’s largest carrier getting it? (I’m talking Verizon Wireless or Big Red as it’s more commonly referred to) Well, supposedly Google did a little teasing today by accidentally posting it for sale at a subsidized price of only $199.00. This can only be a mean trick because Google is proudly the first phone maker to sell a phone through their own means of distribution and NOT through carriers at a subsidized price, essentially it’s full price or nothing. Anyways, the error was quickly fixed and Verizon users are still anxiously waiting for their turn. No official word has been given yet on an official release date for Verizon, but we will keep you posted if things change.
Click here If you are a T-Mobile/AT&T or Rogers user and want to pick up the infamous device
[Via Android Central]
Follow me on twitterNexus One Display Woes Crop Up Again
Mar 25th
First there were screen cracks, then there was the purple tint, and now, according to Luke Hutchison, PhD candidate at MIT’s Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, lower effective screen resolution than the 480×800 advertised. The Nexus One is a gorgeous phone, sure, but it’s had its fair share of issues since its debut in January.
Gleaned from a 3-page, highly-technical spread in Ars Technica, the Nexus One, due to the way the AMOLED screens display pixels, they are not able to reproduce all three colours on a single pixel at the same time. As a result, the actual pixel number is quite a lot smaller, 392×653. Hutchison:
This final result of 392×653 in some sense describes the total effective addressable spatial resolution of the display, again sans signal processing. Conceptually—though this is not how the screen mapping is performed internally—you could think about this display as taking the 480×800 input image and scaling it down to 392×653 image, using subpixel positioning to reduce the apparent blurriness as much as possible.
I own a Nexus One, and I can tell you, the screen has more pixels than the iPhone. That is just the case. The pixel density is far greater, and there is more information, and clearer images, displayed on the screen. But I agree, since I have also owned a Milestone which has a similar-resolution screen to the N1, that text on the former’s screen (and therefore the Droid’s) is far sharper and more nuanced. Hutchison again:
The Droid’s screen is dimmer and more washed-out than the N1′s screen, but text is significantly sharper, to the point that the pixels on the Droid’s screen are almost impossible to discern. I would trade resolution for some loss of color quality any day, because I look at a lot more text than photos on my phone. The fuzziness of text on the N1′s display is visually distracting (at least to me), and it makes the screen much less functional when viewing zoomed-out webpages. It’s also harder on the eye to read on the N1′s screen, because when your eye sees something that looks fuzzy, it constantly tries harder to focus on it.
There is a lot to love about the Nexus One, but its screen seems to be a continuing liability. Maybe, in future iterations, they can change the manufacturer. But this also points to a limitation with AMOLED technology: the inherent increased brightness of the display comes with it, at least for the moment, in the infancy of the technology, some severe drawbacks.
I will be following up on this, mostly because I have a personal interest in the resolution of this matter. I am not putting my N1 on the selling block just yet, but I am certainly disappointed in the screen, and have been since I bought it.
Check out the full article at Ars Technica, and let us know if you’ve had any issues with your Nexus One screen in the comments.
Nexus One Announced for Sprint — Now Where’s Verizon?
Mar 17th
On Sprint Soon
Google’s heralded Nexus One “superphone” will released on Sprint’s CDMA network in the US, forcing the question, “Where is our Verizon Nexus One?”
There is no mention of this on Google’s Nexus One portal, but a Sprint press release has said that availability will be “soon.”
“While a pricing plan has not yet been determined for Nexus One, we are confident that it will be consistent with Sprint’s commitment to deliver more value than our competitors and keep pricing simple,” said Fared Adib, Sprint vice president of product development. “Right now, our Sprint Everything Data 450 plan with Any Mobile, Anytime(SM) gives customers unlimited calling with any mobile phone in America, unlimited text and unlimited Web for just $69.99 per month – the same price AT&T and Verizon charge for just unlimited talk. Our Everything Data plans include unlimited GPS Navigation at no extra charge and annual phone upgrades with Sprint Premier.”
We know that Verizon will be getting the Nexus One sometime in the spring, but when is anyone’s guess at the moment.
Nexus One drops on AT&T and Rogers
Mar 16th
Big news out of AT&T and Rogers today with the release Nexus One. Even though we “knew” it was coming, it still came from no where. Unlike the T-Mobile version, the AT&T version isn’t subsidized so it’ll cost you $529 to pick one up. (I did a few weeks back for my TMo one, it was definitely worth the money)
There are two things I’m looking forward to seeing.
1) Now that they share the same network, will the Nexus One turn into the real iPhone killer? (though they’ll have to step sales up dramatically)
2) Will AT&T pull a “Backflip” and lock out non-Market apps while loading the N1 down with useless carrier-based apps?
If #2 happens, you can almost guarantee #1 has no chance.
So will any of you be picking one up?
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Rumor: Verizon replacing Droid Eris with something Incredible?
Mar 9th
There is word on the street that the Nexus One-like rumoured CDMA device, the Incredible, will be replacing the Droid Eris on Verizon’s large 3G network. as of April 1st. The only proof of the Incredible’s existence are some spy shots and a few specs (very similar to the CDMA Nexus One), but if this is true then perhaps Google’s plans for bringing its flagship device to Big Red are moving along smoothly.
The handset, like the N1, is supposed to have a 3.7″ screen and a 480 x 800 resolution, and feature a 5-megapixel camera on Android OS 2.1.
The spy shots show the handset looks nothing like the Nexus One, but it is not out of reach to believe that Verizon would request a different look for the phone, to differentiate it from its T-Mobile GSM equivalent.
(via BerryScoop)
Thoughts? Am I completely off-base? Let me know in the comments.
Guru Ricky has a new toy…and needs your help
Mar 5th
Hey everyone, I got a new toy this morning – a Nexus One- and I need your help. This is my first Android device so I’m still learning the ins and outs. If anyone has any good app suggestions, or anything they’d like to see reviewed, please let me know. You can leave comments on this post or hit me up directly on my Twitter account.
Thanks in adavance. I’m really looking forward to hearing from you guys!
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CDMA Nexus One spotted in FCC docs
Feb 26th
I’ve got good news for all you Android fans on VZW – the guys and gals over at Engadget have evidence of the CDMA Nexus One in the FCC testing stages. Not too much to say about it yet, but I’m guessing the FCC is far less stringent than VZW’s approval process.
So, Droid-users, you upgrading?
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Yes people..Google is listening!
Feb 14th
As Engadget reported many Nexus One owners have been reporting radio issues on their handsets over the past weeks. Google tried to fix the problem once with a firmware update a couple weeks ago, however problems seem to persist and users are still dropping 3G left and right. In fact, a simple wave of the hand over the lower portion of the phone can cause a drop from 3G to EDGE.
However, there is good news for Nexus One-toting folks, because there have been reports of an update floating around internally which features an updated radio file. Packed with the update is Google Maps 3.4 as opposed to the recently released 4.0, which hints that it is probably an early build. It’s still comforting to know that HTC and Google hear your cries for help, and appear to be working on a solution. Hopefully this time though, it actually works.
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