I'm not impressed by the camera - come on, Nokia N8 had an amazing 12MP (too bad it couldn't record 1080p, though!) - but at least it seems okay and it can record 1080p. The rest of the specs are nice; I'd take an SGS II HD over this but it's a great phone. +1 on calling it Galaxy Nexus, I like Galaxy brand
Maybe now Apple fanboys will shut it about better DPI, because Galaxy Nesus' is aboot the same as their iPhone 4S's, and combined with a bigger screen, it's great. I like all these app updates and new features; but...
... does it have HDMI and USB-on-the-Go?
I wouldn't be surprised if it wouldn't, though, this phone seems a bit different from what we're used to in the Galaxy S line: it doesn't have top specs in everything, but it packs a good set of software, great screen and I'm sure Samsung will find a way for Galaxy Nexus and Galaxy S2 to co-exist peacefully.
I've been skipping on Ice Cream Sandwich news... it looks like they added a few new cool features!
Graph of your data usage, and you can even set a mobile data limit for those of you on data caps. It even breaks down data usage by app. This is VERY cool to have integrated as a native solution. Definitely something that's too granular for Apple to put into iOS.
I like this app-specific limits, and the Apple remark is nice... they allegedly care about their user experience but somehow don't have something like that yet. Another questions is, why did take Android so long to implement this? The idea is simple...
[citation][nom]soo-nah-mee[/nom]ICS really makes iOS5 look pretty ridiculous. Siri is cool, but I haven't seen this many new technologies in a product unveiling since... uhhh...[/citation]
I agree - this is quite a set of new features; I bet that those of the 4S buyers who know a bit about tech are banging their heads against the wall right now...
[citation][nom]subaru41[/nom]WOW, the iPhone 4S has been out for like a week or two and already it seems like really old, outdated technology on a tiny screen.[/citation]
It was ALWAYS like that. iPhone 1 - pretty much every non-touch smartphone packed more connectivity and features. I don't remember what was happening during iPhone 2-3GS, they might have been ahead of others. However, ever since Galaxy S1 came out, their [:amk-aka-phantom:1] innovative [:amk-aka-phantom:1] phones come out already beaten by the competitors products, and I like it this way.