Posted by Unknown
Tuesday, February 25, 2014
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For
Great value
Lightning fast
Lovely screen
Android 4.4
Against
Average battery life
Low-light camera performance
No expandable memory
Page 1 of 9Introduction
Ratings in depth
The
Nexus 5 is the best that Google has to offer right now. It is a lean,
mean Android machine, beyond the reach of OEM embellishment and carrier
bloatware. It delivers a streamlined experience that's stylish, refined,
and lightning fast, and it does all this at a jaw-droppingly low price.
You can snag the 16GB version of the Nexus 5 for £299 or you can lay down an extra £40 and get the 32GB version for £339.
In
terms of hardware the Nexus 5 is a premium smartphone, it just doesn't
have a premium price tag. The Nexus 5 can just about hold its own with
the top devices on the market, including the iPhone 5S (starting at £550), the Samsung Galaxy S4 (now reduced to £420), the HTC One (which you can find for £430), and the Sony Xperia Z1 (now reduced to £430).
A
2.3GHz quad-core Snapdragon 800 chipset and 2GB RAM place this on the
cutting edge. The 5-inch 1080p display is no slouch either, and the
Nexus 5 sports the very latest platform update in Android 4.4 KitKat, with the elegant Google Experience Launcher on top.
Good chips, good screen and a bargain priceIf
you're wondering how Google can offer the Nexus 5 for that much less
than its competitors, then you might point an accusatory finger at the
camera and the battery life, but make no mistake - this phone is a real
bargain.
The Nexus line of smartphones may have started out as
reference devices to show off the platform, but Google has improved
Android immeasurably since the Nexus One and it has refined its strategy in the marketplace.
The
price tag makes it conceivable that you might buy the Nexus 5
off-contract and then seek out the best deal for service. If you have
the cash ready, you'll almost certainly get a better deal that way. Just
in case you don't, O2 and Vodafone are offering it for no money down on
two-year contracts.
I never expected to fall in love with the
Nexus 5, but it seduced me. It certainly has its flaws, and we'll get
into them in due course, but it's also a beautiful phone that sets a new
benchmark for Android.
The
Nexus 5 is a vessel. Google's flagship is supposed to compete at the
premium end of the market, but it would prefer the software, not the
hardware to be the star of the show. To that end, it is almost
completely devoid of superfluous detail.
As I rest it vertically
on the arm of my couch it conjures visions of the monolith from 2001: A
Space Odyssey. To soften it off and make it more comfortable to hold,
the corners are rounded.
This black slab (which also comes in
white) is all about the screen and the entire front of the Nexus 5 is
glass. The only details that break it up are the round earpiece centre
top and the front-facing camera to the left of it. There is actually an
LED notification light down below the screen, but you'll only see that
when it blinks into life.
Despite having a five-inch display, the Nexus 5 measures just 137.9 x 69.2 x 8.6mm and the bezels are nice and thin.
With
a Full HD resolution of 1920 x 1080 pixels, which translates to 445ppi,
the Nexus 5 display looks crisp and accurate. It's an IPS display, and
while critics will point to AMOLED's superior brightness and black
levels, you'd be hard pressed to notice.
The back and sides are soft-touch, matte plastic and it only weighs 130g, just like the Galaxy S4.
Flip
it over and you'll see a couple of design flourishes. The word "Nexus"
is embossed in lowercase gloss, with a tiny LG logo below it. Up top on
the left you'll find the glaring round eye of the 8MP camera, which is
surprisingly big. A tiny LED flash is just below.
The
bottom edge has a standard microUSB port and there are two grilles
either side of it - the Nexus 5 only has one speaker in there; the other
hides a microphone. Up top you'll see the standard 3.5mm headphone port
and a tiny hole for an extra microphone.
On the left spine
there's a ceramic volume rocker, with no markings. On the right spine
there's a ceramic power button and the SIM tray, which you'll need a SIM
tool or a pin to pop out. The Nexus 5 does not open, so there's no
microSD card support or battery switching.
The Nexus 5 is one of
the most comfortable phones I've ever used. It is comparably slow to
heat up, so there are no issues holding it while watching movies or
during extended gaming sessions. The soft-touch finish contrasts
perfectly with the ceramic buttons, which makes them very easy to find
and use without looking.
There
are negatives. The camera lens protrudes enough to make you worry about
it taking the brunt of any impact when the Nexus 5 is put down on a
flat surface. That glass expanse, without any protective lip or border,
suggests that a drop could easily result in disaster and scratches might
be easy to come by.
There's also the inevitable smudging from fingerprints, which turns up on the back and the front, but that's a common problem.
It's
not a flashy design, but the Nexus 5 does feel solid and well made. It
may be a little big for easy one-handed operation if you don't have big
hands, but the extra screen size will justify that trade-off for most
people.
At this price, the design of the Nexus 5 is impressive.
It's understated, almost making the iPhone 5S look gaudy, and it feels
more expensive than the Galaxy S4.
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