Showing posts with label iPhone 3GS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label iPhone 3GS. Show all posts

Tuesday, 20 April 2010

Nexus One: the second choice after iPhone (Blackberry and Nokia is not a contender)

Google’s Nexus One not only looks the part but comes with enough firepower to make it a serious contender for the iPhone 3GS crown, (after Blackberry and Nokia N800 lost to iPhone).
What’s really special about this particular smartphone model is that it runs on the latest Android 2.1 operating system, and has many tricks under its sleeve to compete head on with the iPhone 3GS.

Currently, the Nexus One is only available through the Google website for US$529 (RM1,690) and although the company ships the smartphone internationally, Malaysia is not on the list.

The phone is only 11.5mm thick, the Nexus One generally feels slimmer and sleeker than the iPhone. (It is however about 4.5mm taller than the iPhone.)

The glass-covered front is monopolised by the 3.7in capacitive touchscreen, which has a 480 x 800-pixel resolution.

The display looks awesome with colours that appear to jump right at you. But, like similar screens, it fares poorly under direct sunlight and is also a fingerprint and smudge magnet.
TOO CLOSE: Useful as they are, the four touch-sensitive buttons are too close to the screen. Users would consistently tap the wrong buttons while texting or composing an e-mail, and even when playing games.
There are four touch-sensitive buttons placed slightly at the bottom of the screen for Back, Menu, Home, and Search functions.

Useful as they are, we still found the layout to be somewhat annoying as we kept accidentally tapping them while texting, composing an e-mail message or when playing games.

Further down there is a glowing trackball to navigate and access the phone’s features.

Most users complain that apart from doubling as the camera button and notification light, there’s literally not much use in having it around.

After all, to navigate anywhere on the screen you can simply use your finger. And it’s faster that way too, we might add.

To be fair, however, we did find the trackball handy when playing games. It can be used to navigate in a game, enabling you to take one thumb off the screen, thus providing a bigger viewing area.

In comparison, on the iPhone you need to place both thumbs on the screen especially when playing racing games. This essentially blocks a large portion of the display from the eyes.

Moving on, along the left side you will see the volume rocker while up on top are the power button and a 3.5mm headphone jack. Naturally, the back is where you will find the 5-megapixel camera with LED flash.

Other features include light and proximity sensors, accelerometer, HSDPA, WiFi, A-GPS and a microSD slot with a 4GB card included.

The Nexus One only offers 512MB Flash memory and 512MB RAM to run and store data as well as applications. There is a microSD card slot but unfortunately it is only to store data files.
STACK THEM UP: The Nexus One (on top) is 0.8mm thinner but 4mm lengthier than the iPhone 3GS.
There are plenty to choose from, including a swirling galaxy; blades of waving grass; and an analogue sound meter with a needle that moves to the music you’re playing.

Also available are those that respond directly to touch, such as the Nexus neural network to create more colour lines as well as water that ripples.

Some like it, others don’t but one thing’s for sure — despite being a novelty feature that you would get tired of after a while, the animated wallpaper is still one of the cool functions that would attract people when they first look at the smartphone.

The Nexus One offers up to five homescreens, which you can add and delete shortcut icons, folders and widgets at will. The upper left hand corner of the screen is reserved for notifications.

Just like the iPhone, you only have a virtual keyboard and the spacing of the keys are narrower than the former. This poses a problem in the form of lots of mistyping.

There is no option to increase its width so you are stuck with the default layout.

Excellent touch-sensitivity is not the only feature that closely rivals the iPhone. The Android Market is another — an online marketplace that is what the App Store is to Apple’s iPhone. So far, Nexus got much smaller number of apps than the Apple Store for iPhone.

Anyway, we still can pick from games like Robo Defense and Gem Miner to must-have tools such as metal detectors and digital levels; as well as all social networking and instant messaging mobile editions.
ROLL TO NAVIGATE: Only one finger needs to be on the screen when playing games as a user can also use the trackball to navigate.
And they all work just as well as the iPhone versions, we might add.

Also, Google doesn’t restrict users to apps that are only available on its Android Market. Being an advocate of an open platform, the company also allows users to install software directly from developer sites outside of the marketplace.

On the iPhone you can only do so if you “jailbreak” the device first — a move which is clearly not supported by Apple.

Also unlike the iPhone platform, Android apps are able to run in the background. So, if you accidentally pressed the back button, the app that you’ve already opened will still be where you left it when you come back.

Of course, the Nexus One works tightly with Google apps such as Sky Map. If you want to find out which constellation you are currently looking at, just point the smartphone to the night sky. It that cool or what?

Note however that only free apps are accessible for now as Google needs to work out the billing deal with local carriers first before the paid versions will be made available.

In other words, the smartphone itself needs to be officially available here before that can happen.

A sleek shooter

The camera department is another section in which the smartphone shines. Its 5-megapixel shooter is able to produce above average pictures compared to other camera phones we have used to date.

There are also autofocus, white balance, colour effect controls, digital zoom and three quality settings to help users take better pictures.

Overall images captured were clear and offered vivid colours. Images were also very detailed and low light performance was generally good. There was an element of graininess but this is to be expected from a camera phone.

With the built-in A-GPS you can also geotag your shots for your reference.

The Nexus One’s imaging capabilities don’t end there though, as it also features very capable video recording at up to 720 x 480-pixel resolution at 20 frames per second.

Colour reproduction is good and footage is pretty clear.

Beyond voice dialling

Like most smartphones in the market, Nexus One also supports voice dialling but the technology goes beyond that, offering users an enhanced voice recognition capability to enable them to simply speak to input text.

So when you don’t feel like typing, just press the microphone icon in supported applications to dictate your texts, e-mail, searches, notes and others.

Google Speech Recognition is tightly integrated into Android 2.1 on the Nexus One so to use this feature the phone must connect to the Internet as that’s where the transcribing is done.

It recognises several languages. However, most Malaysians can probably only choose either UK or US English as the option unless you can speak French, German, Italian or Spanish as well.

The accuracy is patchy, at about 60% to 70% success rate. Plus, you would also need to speak slowly and enunciate everything properly. Surprisingly, we got better results in the US English option.

As a phone, the Nexus One isn’t dramatically different from most GSM devices you have probably used. Suffice to say that the call quality is at par with others.

The dynamic noise suppression option is a surprising addition though. The feature makes use of the second microphone located at the phone’s back to isolate background noise from your voice when making calls.

Compared to other “tend to be an iPhone-killers” that have been positioned to dethrone the king, the Nexus One is probably the closest one to be able to do so at the moment after Nokia and Blackberry lost the battle.

It offers many of the iPhone 3GS advantages and more including fast operation, gorgeous display, elegant design, decent camera, plenty of apps to download and customise. Plus we also welcome its voice ­recognition capability.

However, it is not without its problems. For starters, application storage remains limited to the internal memory.

Of course, being a trendsetter also means you usually need to pay a higher price to be among the first to secure the phone. Price probably in the range of — RM2,500 - RM 2,800. I'm not sure how much the Low Yatt will mark up later.

The Android and iPhone platforms can be similar and yet vastly different. (Hint: Windows Mobile is the worse) There are also things beyond the technology platform such as brand loyalty — so at the end of the day it all boils down to what you consider the more important value when choosing one over the other.

NEXUS ONE

OPERATING SYSTEM: Android 2.1
CAMERA: 5-megapixels
DISPLAY: 3.7in 16.7mil colours AMOLED, 800 x 480-pixel resolution
MESSAGING: MMS, SMS, e-mail
CONNECTIVITY: Bluetooth, 3G, HSDPA
PHONE MEMORY: 512MB Flash, 512MB RAM
EXPANSION SLOT: microSD, 8GB card included
BATTERY TYPE: 1,400mAh lithium-ion
STANDBY/TALK TIME: 250/7 hours (on 3G)
OTHER FEATURES: A2DP stereo Bluetooth, haptic feedback, second microphone for dynamic noise suppression, proximity sensor, light sensor
DIMENSIONS (W x D x H): 59.8 x 11.5 x 119mm
WEIGHT: 130g
PREDICTED PRICE: RM2,500 - RM 2,800

Nexus One: the second choice after iPhone (Blackberry and Nokia is not a contender)

Google’s Nexus One not only looks the part but comes with enough firepower to make it a serious contender for the iPhone 3GS crown, (after Blackberry and Nokia N800 lost to iPhone).
What’s really special about this particular smartphone model is that it runs on the latest Android 2.1 operating system, and has many tricks under its sleeve to compete head on with the iPhone 3GS.

Currently, the Nexus One is only available through the Google website for US$529 (RM1,690) and although the company ships the smartphone internationally, Malaysia is not on the list.

The phone is only 11.5mm thick, the Nexus One generally feels slimmer and sleeker than the iPhone. (It is however about 4.5mm taller than the iPhone.)

The glass-covered front is monopolised by the 3.7in capacitive touchscreen, which has a 480 x 800-pixel resolution.

The display looks awesome with colours that appear to jump right at you. But, like similar screens, it fares poorly under direct sunlight and is also a fingerprint and smudge magnet.
TOO CLOSE: Useful as they are, the four touch-sensitive buttons are too close to the screen. Users would consistently tap the wrong buttons while texting or composing an e-mail, and even when playing games.
There are four touch-sensitive buttons placed slightly at the bottom of the screen for Back, Menu, Home, and Search functions.

Useful as they are, we still found the layout to be somewhat annoying as we kept accidentally tapping them while texting, composing an e-mail message or when playing games.

Further down there is a glowing trackball to navigate and access the phone’s features.

Most users complain that apart from doubling as the camera button and notification light, there’s literally not much use in having it around.

After all, to navigate anywhere on the screen you can simply use your finger. And it’s faster that way too, we might add.

To be fair, however, we did find the trackball handy when playing games. It can be used to navigate in a game, enabling you to take one thumb off the screen, thus providing a bigger viewing area.

In comparison, on the iPhone you need to place both thumbs on the screen especially when playing racing games. This essentially blocks a large portion of the display from the eyes.

Moving on, along the left side you will see the volume rocker while up on top are the power button and a 3.5mm headphone jack. Naturally, the back is where you will find the 5-megapixel camera with LED flash.

Other features include light and proximity sensors, accelerometer, HSDPA, WiFi, A-GPS and a microSD slot with a 4GB card included.

The Nexus One only offers 512MB Flash memory and 512MB RAM to run and store data as well as applications. There is a microSD card slot but unfortunately it is only to store data files.
STACK THEM UP: The Nexus One (on top) is 0.8mm thinner but 4mm lengthier than the iPhone 3GS.
There are plenty to choose from, including a swirling galaxy; blades of waving grass; and an analogue sound meter with a needle that moves to the music you’re playing.

Also available are those that respond directly to touch, such as the Nexus neural network to create more colour lines as well as water that ripples.

Some like it, others don’t but one thing’s for sure — despite being a novelty feature that you would get tired of after a while, the animated wallpaper is still one of the cool functions that would attract people when they first look at the smartphone.

The Nexus One offers up to five homescreens, which you can add and delete shortcut icons, folders and widgets at will. The upper left hand corner of the screen is reserved for notifications.

Just like the iPhone, you only have a virtual keyboard and the spacing of the keys are narrower than the former. This poses a problem in the form of lots of mistyping.

There is no option to increase its width so you are stuck with the default layout.

Excellent touch-sensitivity is not the only feature that closely rivals the iPhone. The Android Market is another — an online marketplace that is what the App Store is to Apple’s iPhone. So far, Nexus got much smaller number of apps than the Apple Store for iPhone.

Anyway, we still can pick from games like Robo Defense and Gem Miner to must-have tools such as metal detectors and digital levels; as well as all social networking and instant messaging mobile editions.
ROLL TO NAVIGATE: Only one finger needs to be on the screen when playing games as a user can also use the trackball to navigate.
And they all work just as well as the iPhone versions, we might add.

Also, Google doesn’t restrict users to apps that are only available on its Android Market. Being an advocate of an open platform, the company also allows users to install software directly from developer sites outside of the marketplace.

On the iPhone you can only do so if you “jailbreak” the device first — a move which is clearly not supported by Apple.

Also unlike the iPhone platform, Android apps are able to run in the background. So, if you accidentally pressed the back button, the app that you’ve already opened will still be where you left it when you come back.

Of course, the Nexus One works tightly with Google apps such as Sky Map. If you want to find out which constellation you are currently looking at, just point the smartphone to the night sky. It that cool or what?

Note however that only free apps are accessible for now as Google needs to work out the billing deal with local carriers first before the paid versions will be made available.

In other words, the smartphone itself needs to be officially available here before that can happen.

A sleek shooter

The camera department is another section in which the smartphone shines. Its 5-megapixel shooter is able to produce above average pictures compared to other camera phones we have used to date.

There are also autofocus, white balance, colour effect controls, digital zoom and three quality settings to help users take better pictures.

Overall images captured were clear and offered vivid colours. Images were also very detailed and low light performance was generally good. There was an element of graininess but this is to be expected from a camera phone.

With the built-in A-GPS you can also geotag your shots for your reference.

The Nexus One’s imaging capabilities don’t end there though, as it also features very capable video recording at up to 720 x 480-pixel resolution at 20 frames per second.

Colour reproduction is good and footage is pretty clear.

Beyond voice dialling

Like most smartphones in the market, Nexus One also supports voice dialling but the technology goes beyond that, offering users an enhanced voice recognition capability to enable them to simply speak to input text.

So when you don’t feel like typing, just press the microphone icon in supported applications to dictate your texts, e-mail, searches, notes and others.

Google Speech Recognition is tightly integrated into Android 2.1 on the Nexus One so to use this feature the phone must connect to the Internet as that’s where the transcribing is done.

It recognises several languages. However, most Malaysians can probably only choose either UK or US English as the option unless you can speak French, German, Italian or Spanish as well.

The accuracy is patchy, at about 60% to 70% success rate. Plus, you would also need to speak slowly and enunciate everything properly. Surprisingly, we got better results in the US English option.

As a phone, the Nexus One isn’t dramatically different from most GSM devices you have probably used. Suffice to say that the call quality is at par with others.

The dynamic noise suppression option is a surprising addition though. The feature makes use of the second microphone located at the phone’s back to isolate background noise from your voice when making calls.

Compared to other “tend to be an iPhone-killers” that have been positioned to dethrone the king, the Nexus One is probably the closest one to be able to do so at the moment after Nokia and Blackberry lost the battle.

It offers many of the iPhone 3GS advantages and more including fast operation, gorgeous display, elegant design, decent camera, plenty of apps to download and customise. Plus we also welcome its voice ­recognition capability.

However, it is not without its problems. For starters, application storage remains limited to the internal memory.

Of course, being a trendsetter also means you usually need to pay a higher price to be among the first to secure the phone. Price probably in the range of — RM2,500 - RM 2,800. I'm not sure how much the Low Yatt will mark up later.

The Android and iPhone platforms can be similar and yet vastly different. (Hint: Windows Mobile is the worse) There are also things beyond the technology platform such as brand loyalty — so at the end of the day it all boils down to what you consider the more important value when choosing one over the other.

NEXUS ONE

OPERATING SYSTEM: Android 2.1
CAMERA: 5-megapixels
DISPLAY: 3.7in 16.7mil colours AMOLED, 800 x 480-pixel resolution
MESSAGING: MMS, SMS, e-mail
CONNECTIVITY: Bluetooth, 3G, HSDPA
PHONE MEMORY: 512MB Flash, 512MB RAM
EXPANSION SLOT: microSD, 8GB card included
BATTERY TYPE: 1,400mAh lithium-ion
STANDBY/TALK TIME: 250/7 hours (on 3G)
OTHER FEATURES: A2DP stereo Bluetooth, haptic feedback, second microphone for dynamic noise suppression, proximity sensor, light sensor
DIMENSIONS (W x D x H): 59.8 x 11.5 x 119mm
WEIGHT: 130g
PREDICTED PRICE: RM2,500 - RM 2,800

Nexus One: the second choice after iPhone (Blackberry and Nokia is not a contender)

Google’s Nexus One not only looks the part but comes with enough firepower to make it a serious contender for the iPhone 3GS crown, (after Blackberry and Nokia N800 lost to iPhone).
What’s really special about this particular smartphone model is that it runs on the latest Android 2.1 operating system, and has many tricks under its sleeve to compete head on with the iPhone 3GS.

Currently, the Nexus One is only available through the Google website for US$529 (RM1,690) and although the company ships the smartphone internationally, Malaysia is not on the list.

The phone is only 11.5mm thick, the Nexus One generally feels slimmer and sleeker than the iPhone. (It is however about 4.5mm taller than the iPhone.)

The glass-covered front is monopolised by the 3.7in capacitive touchscreen, which has a 480 x 800-pixel resolution.

The display looks awesome with colours that appear to jump right at you. But, like similar screens, it fares poorly under direct sunlight and is also a fingerprint and smudge magnet.
TOO CLOSE: Useful as they are, the four touch-sensitive buttons are too close to the screen. Users would consistently tap the wrong buttons while texting or composing an e-mail, and even when playing games.
There are four touch-sensitive buttons placed slightly at the bottom of the screen for Back, Menu, Home, and Search functions.

Useful as they are, we still found the layout to be somewhat annoying as we kept accidentally tapping them while texting, composing an e-mail message or when playing games.

Further down there is a glowing trackball to navigate and access the phone’s features.

Most users complain that apart from doubling as the camera button and notification light, there’s literally not much use in having it around.

After all, to navigate anywhere on the screen you can simply use your finger. And it’s faster that way too, we might add.

To be fair, however, we did find the trackball handy when playing games. It can be used to navigate in a game, enabling you to take one thumb off the screen, thus providing a bigger viewing area.

In comparison, on the iPhone you need to place both thumbs on the screen especially when playing racing games. This essentially blocks a large portion of the display from the eyes.

Moving on, along the left side you will see the volume rocker while up on top are the power button and a 3.5mm headphone jack. Naturally, the back is where you will find the 5-megapixel camera with LED flash.

Other features include light and proximity sensors, accelerometer, HSDPA, WiFi, A-GPS and a microSD slot with a 4GB card included.

The Nexus One only offers 512MB Flash memory and 512MB RAM to run and store data as well as applications. There is a microSD card slot but unfortunately it is only to store data files.
STACK THEM UP: The Nexus One (on top) is 0.8mm thinner but 4mm lengthier than the iPhone 3GS.
There are plenty to choose from, including a swirling galaxy; blades of waving grass; and an analogue sound meter with a needle that moves to the music you’re playing.

Also available are those that respond directly to touch, such as the Nexus neural network to create more colour lines as well as water that ripples.

Some like it, others don’t but one thing’s for sure — despite being a novelty feature that you would get tired of after a while, the animated wallpaper is still one of the cool functions that would attract people when they first look at the smartphone.

The Nexus One offers up to five homescreens, which you can add and delete shortcut icons, folders and widgets at will. The upper left hand corner of the screen is reserved for notifications.

Just like the iPhone, you only have a virtual keyboard and the spacing of the keys are narrower than the former. This poses a problem in the form of lots of mistyping.

There is no option to increase its width so you are stuck with the default layout.

Excellent touch-sensitivity is not the only feature that closely rivals the iPhone. The Android Market is another — an online marketplace that is what the App Store is to Apple’s iPhone. So far, Nexus got much smaller number of apps than the Apple Store for iPhone.

Anyway, we still can pick from games like Robo Defense and Gem Miner to must-have tools such as metal detectors and digital levels; as well as all social networking and instant messaging mobile editions.
ROLL TO NAVIGATE: Only one finger needs to be on the screen when playing games as a user can also use the trackball to navigate.
And they all work just as well as the iPhone versions, we might add.

Also, Google doesn’t restrict users to apps that are only available on its Android Market. Being an advocate of an open platform, the company also allows users to install software directly from developer sites outside of the marketplace.

On the iPhone you can only do so if you “jailbreak” the device first — a move which is clearly not supported by Apple.

Also unlike the iPhone platform, Android apps are able to run in the background. So, if you accidentally pressed the back button, the app that you’ve already opened will still be where you left it when you come back.

Of course, the Nexus One works tightly with Google apps such as Sky Map. If you want to find out which constellation you are currently looking at, just point the smartphone to the night sky. It that cool or what?

Note however that only free apps are accessible for now as Google needs to work out the billing deal with local carriers first before the paid versions will be made available.

In other words, the smartphone itself needs to be officially available here before that can happen.

A sleek shooter

The camera department is another section in which the smartphone shines. Its 5-megapixel shooter is able to produce above average pictures compared to other camera phones we have used to date.

There are also autofocus, white balance, colour effect controls, digital zoom and three quality settings to help users take better pictures.

Overall images captured were clear and offered vivid colours. Images were also very detailed and low light performance was generally good. There was an element of graininess but this is to be expected from a camera phone.

With the built-in A-GPS you can also geotag your shots for your reference.

The Nexus One’s imaging capabilities don’t end there though, as it also features very capable video recording at up to 720 x 480-pixel resolution at 20 frames per second.

Colour reproduction is good and footage is pretty clear.

Beyond voice dialling

Like most smartphones in the market, Nexus One also supports voice dialling but the technology goes beyond that, offering users an enhanced voice recognition capability to enable them to simply speak to input text.

So when you don’t feel like typing, just press the microphone icon in supported applications to dictate your texts, e-mail, searches, notes and others.

Google Speech Recognition is tightly integrated into Android 2.1 on the Nexus One so to use this feature the phone must connect to the Internet as that’s where the transcribing is done.

It recognises several languages. However, most Malaysians can probably only choose either UK or US English as the option unless you can speak French, German, Italian or Spanish as well.

The accuracy is patchy, at about 60% to 70% success rate. Plus, you would also need to speak slowly and enunciate everything properly. Surprisingly, we got better results in the US English option.

As a phone, the Nexus One isn’t dramatically different from most GSM devices you have probably used. Suffice to say that the call quality is at par with others.

The dynamic noise suppression option is a surprising addition though. The feature makes use of the second microphone located at the phone’s back to isolate background noise from your voice when making calls.

Compared to other “tend to be an iPhone-killers” that have been positioned to dethrone the king, the Nexus One is probably the closest one to be able to do so at the moment after Nokia and Blackberry lost the battle.

It offers many of the iPhone 3GS advantages and more including fast operation, gorgeous display, elegant design, decent camera, plenty of apps to download and customise. Plus we also welcome its voice ­recognition capability.

However, it is not without its problems. For starters, application storage remains limited to the internal memory.

Of course, being a trendsetter also means you usually need to pay a higher price to be among the first to secure the phone. Price probably in the range of — RM2,500 - RM 2,800. I'm not sure how much the Low Yatt will mark up later.

The Android and iPhone platforms can be similar and yet vastly different. (Hint: Windows Mobile is the worse) There are also things beyond the technology platform such as brand loyalty — so at the end of the day it all boils down to what you consider the more important value when choosing one over the other.

NEXUS ONE

OPERATING SYSTEM: Android 2.1
CAMERA: 5-megapixels
DISPLAY: 3.7in 16.7mil colours AMOLED, 800 x 480-pixel resolution
MESSAGING: MMS, SMS, e-mail
CONNECTIVITY: Bluetooth, 3G, HSDPA
PHONE MEMORY: 512MB Flash, 512MB RAM
EXPANSION SLOT: microSD, 8GB card included
BATTERY TYPE: 1,400mAh lithium-ion
STANDBY/TALK TIME: 250/7 hours (on 3G)
OTHER FEATURES: A2DP stereo Bluetooth, haptic feedback, second microphone for dynamic noise suppression, proximity sensor, light sensor
DIMENSIONS (W x D x H): 59.8 x 11.5 x 119mm
WEIGHT: 130g
PREDICTED PRICE: RM2,500 - RM 2,800

Monday, 31 August 2009

Nokia N900 vs iPhone 3Gs

Nokia recently launched a new class of smartphone as its flagship. The promised N900 is a crossover between smartphones and Nokia’s Internet tablets, and makes its biggest break in its change of operating system: although still a phone, the handset runs Nokia’s latest Linux variant platform, not Symbian. Symbian OS seems like incapable to support a heavy duty computer likes application on phone. Maemo 5 renders it one of the first smartphones to have true PC-like multitasking and not only lets it run “dozens” of app windows at once but gives it a simple, large dashboard for switching and closing apps.

In hardware, Nokia makes clear the N900’s role as an effective replacement for the N97 and the company’s answer to the iPhone 3GS. The QWERTY slider design has the same 600MHz ARM Cortex-A8 processor as the Apple smartphone and a faster graphics core that, again like Apple, supports OpenGL ES 2.0 graphics features. GPS and Wi-Fi are similarly onboard. However, the N900 brings much more app memory at up to 1GB (256MB actual RAM), full HSPA-based 3G at up to 10Mbps down and 2Mbps up, and a much sharper 800×480, 3.5-inch touchscreen. The 5-megapixel camera and 32GB of storage are also carried over from the N97, but a microSDHC slot lets users add at least another 16GB with today’s cards.




Source: ERM Blog

Nokia N900 vs iPhone 3Gs

Nokia recently launched a new class of smartphone as its flagship. The promised N900 is a crossover between smartphones and Nokia’s Internet tablets, and makes its biggest break in its change of operating system: although still a phone, the handset runs Nokia’s latest Linux variant platform, not Symbian. Symbian OS seems like incapable to support a heavy duty computer likes application on phone. Maemo 5 renders it one of the first smartphones to have true PC-like multitasking and not only lets it run “dozens” of app windows at once but gives it a simple, large dashboard for switching and closing apps.

In hardware, Nokia makes clear the N900’s role as an effective replacement for the N97 and the company’s answer to the iPhone 3GS. The QWERTY slider design has the same 600MHz ARM Cortex-A8 processor as the Apple smartphone and a faster graphics core that, again like Apple, supports OpenGL ES 2.0 graphics features. GPS and Wi-Fi are similarly onboard. However, the N900 brings much more app memory at up to 1GB (256MB actual RAM), full HSPA-based 3G at up to 10Mbps down and 2Mbps up, and a much sharper 800×480, 3.5-inch touchscreen. The 5-megapixel camera and 32GB of storage are also carried over from the N97, but a microSDHC slot lets users add at least another 16GB with today’s cards.




Source: ERM Blog

Nokia N900 vs iPhone 3Gs

Nokia recently launched a new class of smartphone as its flagship. The promised N900 is a crossover between smartphones and Nokia’s Internet tablets, and makes its biggest break in its change of operating system: although still a phone, the handset runs Nokia’s latest Linux variant platform, not Symbian. Symbian OS seems like incapable to support a heavy duty computer likes application on phone. Maemo 5 renders it one of the first smartphones to have true PC-like multitasking and not only lets it run “dozens” of app windows at once but gives it a simple, large dashboard for switching and closing apps.

In hardware, Nokia makes clear the N900’s role as an effective replacement for the N97 and the company’s answer to the iPhone 3GS. The QWERTY slider design has the same 600MHz ARM Cortex-A8 processor as the Apple smartphone and a faster graphics core that, again like Apple, supports OpenGL ES 2.0 graphics features. GPS and Wi-Fi are similarly onboard. However, the N900 brings much more app memory at up to 1GB (256MB actual RAM), full HSPA-based 3G at up to 10Mbps down and 2Mbps up, and a much sharper 800×480, 3.5-inch touchscreen. The 5-megapixel camera and 32GB of storage are also carried over from the N97, but a microSDHC slot lets users add at least another 16GB with today’s cards.




Source: ERM Blog

Tuesday, 23 June 2009

Technical Comparison: iPhone 3GS vs. 3G vs Palm Pre


After the announcement of the iPhone 3GS of the hardware specs of the 3GS. Here we outlined the single chip CPU/GPU SoC as follows:
iPhone 3G (ARM11)
iPhone 3GS (ARM Cortex A8)
Manufacturing Process
90nm
65nm
Architecture
In-Order
In-Order
Issue Width
1-issue
2-issue
Pipeline Depth
8-stage
13-stage
Clock Speed
412MHz
600MHz
L1 Cache Size
16KB I-Cache + 16KB D-Cache
32KB I-Cache + 32KB D-Cache
L2 Cache Size
N/A
256KB
The iPhone 3GS uses an ARM Cortex A8 processor running at 600MHz, much like the Palm Pre. Many weren’t confident that the 3GS used the new ARM A8 core instead of a higher clocked ARM11

WiFi
Apple iPhone 3G
Apple iPhone 3GS
Palm Pre
T-Mobile G1
anandtech.com
16.3 s
7.8 s
8.2 s
17.2 s
arstechnica.com
17.7 s
6.3 s
7.8 s
17.8 s
hothardware.com
35.2 s
14.7 s
11.2 s
24.4 s
pcper.com
33.3 s
15.0 s
18.0 s
34.0 s
digg.com
34.3 s
15.0 s
22.1 s
40.0 s
techreport.com
24.1 s
9.6 s
9.0 s
20.5 s
tomshardware.com
21.4 s
16.4 s
13.8 s
26.0 s
slashdot.org
26.0 s
10.0 s
20.9 s
46.0 s
facebook.com
31.7 s
13.5 s
19.6 s
37.7 s
iPhone 3GS Advantage over Palm Pre
21%
iPhone 3GS Advantage over iPhone 3G
122%
The new 3GS renders web pages 128% faster, on average, than the old iPhone 3G. The 45% clock speed boost alone isn’t enough to generate such a large performance increase, this is a new microarchitecture. Also, note that the 3GS’ performance mimics that of the Palm Pre - another Cortex A8 based phone.

Not too surprising given the just-released nature of the Pre’s webOS, the 3GS is actually able to render webpages slightly faster than the Pre in some cases. The overall performance advantage ends up being 22.6% in favor of the 3GS over the Pre.
Application launch time has also improved :
Application Launch Time in Seconds
Web Browser
Dialer
Google Maps
Camera
Email
Apple iPhone 3GS
0.7 s
0.7 s
2.7 s
2.8 s
0.8 s
Apple iPhone 3G
0.8 s
1.2 s
3.3 s
3.9 s
1.2 s
Palm Pre
3.0 s
1.5 s
8.6 s
4.4 s
3.3 s
T-Mobile G1
5.4 s
2.0 s
4.4 s
4.9 s
2.0 s
iPhone 3GS vs. 3G Performance Advantage
14%
71.5%
22.2%
39.4%
50%
While the old iPhone 3G was no slouch, the 3GS is anywhere from 14 - 72% faster in basic application load times. It’s the magic of a brand new CPU architecture.

Source: ERM Blog
This is the gadget that I would recommed for IIUM wireless users to get connected through SSID iium-gadget. In addition, Blackberry also has almost similar performance with iPhone. You can feel the real performance of IIUM campus wide infrastructure. So far, Windows Mobile based phone still not recommended because it will drop the backward compatibility of default wifi 802.11g technology. Standard handphone running on wifi 802.11b and it will change the nearby channel to 11b instead of 11g. ITD will not tolerate to open the access for any gadget that able to down grade the nearby performance. If you own an iPhone or Blackberry, you are welcome to register for iium-gadget access.
For Symbion and Windows Mobile users, wait until new development. So far, even T-Mobile G1 performance, it take 5.4s to launch a web browser. Next time, before you purchase your handphone… carefully check the hadrware spec for clock speed, processor and cache size.
Click Here for Side by Side Comparison iPhone 3Gs VS Nokia N900

Technical Comparison: iPhone 3GS vs. 3G vs Palm Pre


After the announcement of the iPhone 3GS of the hardware specs of the 3GS. Here we outlined the single chip CPU/GPU SoC as follows:
iPhone 3G (ARM11)
iPhone 3GS (ARM Cortex A8)
Manufacturing Process
90nm
65nm
Architecture
In-Order
In-Order
Issue Width
1-issue
2-issue
Pipeline Depth
8-stage
13-stage
Clock Speed
412MHz
600MHz
L1 Cache Size
16KB I-Cache + 16KB D-Cache
32KB I-Cache + 32KB D-Cache
L2 Cache Size
N/A
256KB
The iPhone 3GS uses an ARM Cortex A8 processor running at 600MHz, much like the Palm Pre. Many weren’t confident that the 3GS used the new ARM A8 core instead of a higher clocked ARM11

WiFi
Apple iPhone 3G
Apple iPhone 3GS
Palm Pre
T-Mobile G1
anandtech.com
16.3 s
7.8 s
8.2 s
17.2 s
arstechnica.com
17.7 s
6.3 s
7.8 s
17.8 s
hothardware.com
35.2 s
14.7 s
11.2 s
24.4 s
pcper.com
33.3 s
15.0 s
18.0 s
34.0 s
digg.com
34.3 s
15.0 s
22.1 s
40.0 s
techreport.com
24.1 s
9.6 s
9.0 s
20.5 s
tomshardware.com
21.4 s
16.4 s
13.8 s
26.0 s
slashdot.org
26.0 s
10.0 s
20.9 s
46.0 s
facebook.com
31.7 s
13.5 s
19.6 s
37.7 s
iPhone 3GS Advantage over Palm Pre
21%
iPhone 3GS Advantage over iPhone 3G
122%
The new 3GS renders web pages 128% faster, on average, than the old iPhone 3G. The 45% clock speed boost alone isn’t enough to generate such a large performance increase, this is a new microarchitecture. Also, note that the 3GS’ performance mimics that of the Palm Pre - another Cortex A8 based phone.

Not too surprising given the just-released nature of the Pre’s webOS, the 3GS is actually able to render webpages slightly faster than the Pre in some cases. The overall performance advantage ends up being 22.6% in favor of the 3GS over the Pre.
Application launch time has also improved :
Application Launch Time in Seconds
Web Browser
Dialer
Google Maps
Camera
Email
Apple iPhone 3GS
0.7 s
0.7 s
2.7 s
2.8 s
0.8 s
Apple iPhone 3G
0.8 s
1.2 s
3.3 s
3.9 s
1.2 s
Palm Pre
3.0 s
1.5 s
8.6 s
4.4 s
3.3 s
T-Mobile G1
5.4 s
2.0 s
4.4 s
4.9 s
2.0 s
iPhone 3GS vs. 3G Performance Advantage
14%
71.5%
22.2%
39.4%
50%
While the old iPhone 3G was no slouch, the 3GS is anywhere from 14 - 72% faster in basic application load times. It’s the magic of a brand new CPU architecture.

Source: ERM Blog
This is the gadget that I would recommed for IIUM wireless users to get connected through SSID iium-gadget. In addition, Blackberry also has almost similar performance with iPhone. You can feel the real performance of IIUM campus wide infrastructure. So far, Windows Mobile based phone still not recommended because it will drop the backward compatibility of default wifi 802.11g technology. Standard handphone running on wifi 802.11b and it will change the nearby channel to 11b instead of 11g. ITD will not tolerate to open the access for any gadget that able to down grade the nearby performance. If you own an iPhone or Blackberry, you are welcome to register for iium-gadget access.
For Symbion and Windows Mobile users, wait until new development. So far, even T-Mobile G1 performance, it take 5.4s to launch a web browser. Next time, before you purchase your handphone… carefully check the hadrware spec for clock speed, processor and cache size.
Click Here for Side by Side Comparison iPhone 3Gs VS Nokia N900

Technical Comparison: iPhone 3GS vs. 3G vs Palm Pre


After the announcement of the iPhone 3GS of the hardware specs of the 3GS. Here we outlined the single chip CPU/GPU SoC as follows:
iPhone 3G (ARM11)
iPhone 3GS (ARM Cortex A8)
Manufacturing Process
90nm
65nm
Architecture
In-Order
In-Order
Issue Width
1-issue
2-issue
Pipeline Depth
8-stage
13-stage
Clock Speed
412MHz
600MHz
L1 Cache Size
16KB I-Cache + 16KB D-Cache
32KB I-Cache + 32KB D-Cache
L2 Cache Size
N/A
256KB
The iPhone 3GS uses an ARM Cortex A8 processor running at 600MHz, much like the Palm Pre. Many weren’t confident that the 3GS used the new ARM A8 core instead of a higher clocked ARM11

WiFi
Apple iPhone 3G
Apple iPhone 3GS
Palm Pre
T-Mobile G1
anandtech.com
16.3 s
7.8 s
8.2 s
17.2 s
arstechnica.com
17.7 s
6.3 s
7.8 s
17.8 s
hothardware.com
35.2 s
14.7 s
11.2 s
24.4 s
pcper.com
33.3 s
15.0 s
18.0 s
34.0 s
digg.com
34.3 s
15.0 s
22.1 s
40.0 s
techreport.com
24.1 s
9.6 s
9.0 s
20.5 s
tomshardware.com
21.4 s
16.4 s
13.8 s
26.0 s
slashdot.org
26.0 s
10.0 s
20.9 s
46.0 s
facebook.com
31.7 s
13.5 s
19.6 s
37.7 s
iPhone 3GS Advantage over Palm Pre
21%
iPhone 3GS Advantage over iPhone 3G
122%
The new 3GS renders web pages 128% faster, on average, than the old iPhone 3G. The 45% clock speed boost alone isn’t enough to generate such a large performance increase, this is a new microarchitecture. Also, note that the 3GS’ performance mimics that of the Palm Pre - another Cortex A8 based phone.

Not too surprising given the just-released nature of the Pre’s webOS, the 3GS is actually able to render webpages slightly faster than the Pre in some cases. The overall performance advantage ends up being 22.6% in favor of the 3GS over the Pre.
Application launch time has also improved :
Application Launch Time in Seconds
Web Browser
Dialer
Google Maps
Camera
Email
Apple iPhone 3GS
0.7 s
0.7 s
2.7 s
2.8 s
0.8 s
Apple iPhone 3G
0.8 s
1.2 s
3.3 s
3.9 s
1.2 s
Palm Pre
3.0 s
1.5 s
8.6 s
4.4 s
3.3 s
T-Mobile G1
5.4 s
2.0 s
4.4 s
4.9 s
2.0 s
iPhone 3GS vs. 3G Performance Advantage
14%
71.5%
22.2%
39.4%
50%
While the old iPhone 3G was no slouch, the 3GS is anywhere from 14 - 72% faster in basic application load times. It’s the magic of a brand new CPU architecture.

Source: ERM Blog
This is the gadget that I would recommed for IIUM wireless users to get connected through SSID iium-gadget. In addition, Blackberry also has almost similar performance with iPhone. You can feel the real performance of IIUM campus wide infrastructure. So far, Windows Mobile based phone still not recommended because it will drop the backward compatibility of default wifi 802.11g technology. Standard handphone running on wifi 802.11b and it will change the nearby channel to 11b instead of 11g. ITD will not tolerate to open the access for any gadget that able to down grade the nearby performance. If you own an iPhone or Blackberry, you are welcome to register for iium-gadget access.
For Symbion and Windows Mobile users, wait until new development. So far, even T-Mobile G1 performance, it take 5.4s to launch a web browser. Next time, before you purchase your handphone… carefully check the hadrware spec for clock speed, processor and cache size.
Click Here for Side by Side Comparison iPhone 3Gs VS Nokia N900