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LTE 4G is, as they say in Boston, wicked fast. And AT&T's shiny new
LTE version is magnificently showcased on the new LG Nitro, which also
features an exquisite “HD” 1280 x 720 4.5-inch display.
But
there's an equally wicked price to pay for this wicked LTE 4G speed, and
the Nitro is Exhibit A as to why Apple has thus far eschewed LTE for
the iPhone: battery. But it's not exactly usage life that plagues
Nitro's battery and ultimately dooms it. A quick caveat, however: I've
been playing with Nitro for only two days, so I haven't been able to run
it through as many paces as I would like.
Physical design
Nitro
and the Samsung's Sprint Galaxy S II are nearly doppelgangers
physically - Nitro is a hair taller, the Galaxy S II a hair wider, and
both are a hair thicker than iPhone.
But Nitro (like other recent
4.5-inch Android models) nearly swallows iPhone 4 - its screen real
estate is nearly as spacious as iPhone's entire area. With its weight
more widely distributed, Nitro doesn't drag down a front shirt pocket as
drastically as iPhone does.
Even though it's more expansive,
Nitro is - and feels - lighter than iPhone, .4 ounces to be exact. With
its herringbone textured plastic rear, Nitro also is not as slippery as
iPhone.
1280×720 Display
The LG Nitro (right) can display extra information, thanks to the 720p resolution
Nitro
is just one of the latest Android 4.3 “superphones”: dual core 1.5 GHz
engine, 4.5-inch IPS (rather than Super AMOLED) LCD screen, 8 MP rear
camera/1.3 MP front camera, Wi-Fi hotspot - the suddenly usual spec
suspects. Oddly, Nitro is equipped with only 4 GB of built in memory -
most other Android superphones include 8 GB - supplemented by a
pre-installed 16 GB micro SD card.
Other than its swift LTE
connectivity, Nitro's primary selling point and primary differentiation
from other superphones and iPhone is its pristine 1280 x 720 display.
Nitro packs in 329 pixels per inch, a meaningless (other than for
bragging rights) three more than iPhone 4′s vaunted Retina display, a
slightly more noticeable 111 more than the Samsung Galaxy S II.
More
pixels per inch means a finer and smoother reading experience. Combined
with the 4.5-inch screen area, more ppi also means more text and lines
per screen. For instance, you get around a half dozen more lines on a
Kindle book page - who needs a Fire? - than you do on iPhone, and around
10 more lines on Wikipedia's Featured Article.
But smaller type
is not always a good thing. Text on the Nitro often gets so squinty
small that it becomes deuce difficult to discern, especially if your
eyes are aging as inelegantly as the rest of your body. Baby boomers
beware.
Externally loaded and YouTube app videos look
breathtakingly looking-through-a-window crisp and colorful on Nitro. Web
video, however, suffers. Colors are overblown and unnatural - golf
course grass look like a sheet of green neon, for instance - and
streaming is often grainy and suffers from buffering breakup; Web videos
on iPhone stream far more stolidly and colors are far more natural.
Nitro's
TFT LCD display suffers from the same automatic brightness sensor
deficiency as Galaxy's AMOLED screens. In order to bring its brightness
up to par with iPhone's, I had to turn off Nitro's auto brightness.
But
once so adjusted, Nitro displays pure white backgrounds compared to
iPhone's slightly yellow/green tint and Galaxy S II's downright annoying
shadowy blue-ish gray hue. Nitro's whiter whites along, along with its
IPS LCD technology, allows details to better cut through direct sunlight
than Galaxy S II, although still not as distinctly as iPhone.
Camera/Video
The winner and still champion: iPhone 4S
Nearly all these
superphones capture good-to-great snaps in bright sunlight; the real
test of a smartphone camera is indoor and night shots. And look no
further than the two photos of the neon-lit Brooklyn Diner, down the
street from Carnegie Hall on 57th Street in Manhattan, to glean typical
smartphone camera night shot issues.
As you can see, while Nitro
offers slightly deeper contrasts and poppier colors, the neon didn't
blow out as much as on iPhone. But once run through iOS 5′s auto
enhancement, voila - a nearly perfect image.
Indoor shots on the
Nitro similarly maximize their color and minimize the grain marginally
better than any of the Galaxys I've tried and have a much faster
shutter, although not as fast as iPhone's. Nitro also offers a wider
viewing angle, which means you get more in your shot than iPhone.
Nitro's
full HD 1920 x 1080p videos also look smoother with less grain than
Galaxy's - none of the digital herky jerky one often sees from
smartphone video - nearly as smooth and grain free as iPhone's HD
footage.
Web speed (wow!)
Wow. 4G LTE lives up to its
hype, with Web-optimized pages popping into view within 2-3 seconds,
putting both Sprint's WiMAX and iPhone's 3G connections to shame. The
decidedly un-optimized New York Daily News site finished loading in
around 10 seconds on Nitro, around half a minute on iPhone.
Although,
oddly, iPhone consistently loaded both YouTube app and Web videos 3-5
seconds faster than Nitro. Given Nitro's more powerful processor and
faster connection, this makes no logical sense - I'm as surprised as you
are.
In speed tests in Manhattan, Nitro averaged 15 Mbps on
AT&T's LTE 4G network, three times faster than the Samsung Galaxy S
II on Sprint's WiMAX 4G network, which in turn was twice as fast as
iPhone on AT&T 3G.
Hotspotting with Nitro also is the fastest
I've experienced via smartphone Wi-Fi tethering, with pages loading on
my laptop nearly as fast as my home Wi-Fi connection or via my Verizon
4G LTE MiFi.
One problem: Nitro's connection often petered out, requiring a phone re-boot to re-start it.
By
the way, if you find 4G Networks to be confusing, it's because they
are. Multiple carriers using different technologies with widely
different performance call their networks “4G”. If you want to brush up
on what 4G actually is, read our 4G Networks Where Are We? story.
Voice quality (Disappointing)
Acoustics
are inconsistent, with the hollow tunnel echo effect fading in and out.
Speakerphone quality is equally uneven, leaning more toward the muddy
side than not.
Battery
As you'd expect with an LTE phone, Nitro doesn't last long - a little
more than five hours on what I consider to be above average usage of
voice calls, Web surfing, video viewing, music listening, app
downloading, and e-book reading.
Sprint's WiMAX phones largely avoid this short shelf life by putting its 4G connection to sleep when it's not being used.
What's
shocking is not Nitro's relatively short battery life - disappointing
but understandable given LTE's inherent power issues - but the recharge
time.
It took SIX HOURS to completely recharge Nitro. That's
right, it takes longer to refill Nitro's battery than it does to drain
it. I don't recall ever encountering this battery anomaly on any gadget
I've ever used.
In practical terms, with a six-hour recharge
time, Nitro becomes essentially useless at the end of a work day (unless
you've kept it plugged in all day, which defeats its purpose). This, to
me, is a crippling deficiency, the proverbial deal-breaker.
Conclusion
I
could live with Nitro's picayune peccadilloes - too bright Web video
colors, too-tiny type, lower-than-average vocal quality, five-hour
battery life - given its revelatory LTE 4G connection speed. But that
six-hour recharge time is too tough to take.
I hope the new article about LG Nitro Reviews can increase your knowledge about the latest development in mobile phone. The price of the phone depending on the brand, model and specifications.
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